Welcome back, Steve B! Microsoft's former CEO, not exactly the shy, retiring type, can't have made too many people in Redmond happy this week by criticizing new CEO Satya Nadella's financial reporting strategy for Microsoft's new focus on cloud services,
as reported by Bloomberg. I mean, he's right, terms like "revenue run-rate" are misleading and vague, but it's not like Microsoft's cloud unit was a bastion of fiscal transparency under his watch.
HPE & MICROSOFT AZURE DEEPEN THEIR CLOUD PARTNERSHIP Now that the new HPE has given up trying to build its own public cloud, it's cozying up to old friend Microsoft.
SDX Central reports that the two companies plan to work together on platforms for their respective customers that use HP servers on Azure's service.
BIG CHANGES AT CENTURYLINK'S CLOUD UNIT The departure of two senior cloud executives from CenturyLink this week prompts a few questions about the direction of that unit.
Fortune reports that Jared Wray and Jonathan King are out amid strong competition in the public cloud market.
King landed at Ericsson with old buddy (and Structure 2015 speaker) Jason Hoffman, both formerly of Joyent.
AMAZON'S AWS CONUNDRUM With the financial performance of AWS blowing people's minds, and the different types of sales and marketing folks required to sell enterprise services (as opposed to books or toilet paper), there's growing chatter that Amazon might want to spin out AWS as a separate company.
The Information (subscription required) takes a look at how that might work in practice if Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos pulls the trigger.
ZERO TO EXPERT IN EIGHT HOURS: THESE ROBOTS CAN LEARN FOR THEMSELVES Artificial intelligence and machine learning will be big topics at Structure Data 2016 (more on that in a bit), and it's easy to see why based on
this report from Bloomberg on AI startup Preferred Networks. The company developed algorithms that allowed a robot to learn how to perform tasks on its own in a matter of hours, which could have a huge impact on the manufacturing economy.