We've showcased several times how one of America's oldest companies is transforming itself in the cloud era, featuring GE's Chris Drumgoole at Structure 2015 and getting ready to host GE Wurldtech CEO Tom Le at Structure Security.
The New York Times had a great in-depth examination of GE's progress over the last few years, and it's worth your time if you're considering a similar transformation at your company.
GOOGLE PARTNERS WITH OKTA TO ENABLE SECURE MULTI-CLOUD DEPLOYMENTS Okta (whose CEO, Todd McKinnon, will be at Structure Security) held its big Oktane conference this week, and one of the highlights was a deal with Google to use Okta's single-sign-on technology inside Google Cloud Platform and Google Apps.
ZDNet reports that the deal is a further sign of coziness between the two companies, who share a common competitor in Microsoft.
BAIDU AND NVIDIA TO BUILD ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE PLATFORM FOR SELF-DRIVING CARS Baidu's Andrew Ng told Structure Data 2016 attendees that he thinks self-driving cars will be in mass production in five years, and if that's going to hold true, Baidu will need some help. This week the company announced a deal with Nvidia, whose chips appear to be the early front-runner for AI and machine learning research, to build a platform that can be used by Chinese automakers to deploy self-driving cars in China,
according to Fortune.
CLOUDERA ASKED INTEL FOR $1 BILLION TO BUILD A CLOUD SERVICE Structure Data veteran Cloudera might be looking to build a full-fledged cloud service for its big data customers, if
a report by Venturebeat is correct. The report suggests Cloudera asked Intel, one of its major investors, for an additional $1 billion to start the project, but it's not clear if Intel followed through or if Cloudera is actually working on such a project.
HOW TECH GIANTS ARE DEVISING REAL ETHICS FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Can we trust the tech industry to self-regulate when it comes to artificial intelligence? We're going to find out, as
The New York Times reports on a partnership between several leading companies -- Alphabet, Amazon, Facebook, IBM, and Microsoft -- to make sure AI is used in ways that help people. Profitably help people, of course.
FBI DIRECTOR WANTS 'ADULT CONVERSATION' ABOUT BACKDOORING ENCRYPTION Don't miss the subhead on
this story from The Register about a speech that FBI Director James Comey made about encryption that's sure to once again rile up supporters of the technology. In case you didn't see what Comey did there, implying that concerns about backdoors over the last several months have been childish hardly furthers the debate.