Slowly but surely, the cloud is becoming the future of the greatest boxed software company ever. Microsoft is still heavily dependent on sales of Windows and Window Server, but as
Venturebeat reports, Azure was the shining star in its Intelligent Cloud division during the last quarter, and there's a long way to go.
INTEL POSTS SOLID Q3 WITH RECORD REVENUES IN IOT AND DATA CENTER The other half of the fabled Wintel duo also continues to regain its footing, with revenue from its data center group (led by Structure 2016 speaker Raejeanne Skillern) up strongly year over year,
according to ZDNet. But as we're about to discuss, there are potential headwinds on Intel's datacenter chip business that bear watching as the cloud continues to grow.
GOOGLE PUTS INTEL ON NOTICE; WHY MICROSOFT IS PUTTING THESE CHIPS AT THE CENTER OF THE CLOUD Intel's chips rule cloud datacetners right now, but that might not last forever.
Extremetech reports on Google's renewed interest in the Power architecture for some of its datacenter chips, and
Fortune notes a big push by Microsoft to design FPGAs (field programmable gate arrays) for artificial intelligence applications, a chip design outside of Intel's historical strengths.
APPLE HAS HIRED A BIG BRAIN IN AI TO MAKE SIRI LESS DUMB Most consumers are being introduced to basic artificial intelligence by mobile assistants like Microsoft's Cortana, Amazon's Echo, and Apple's Siri. Despite Apple's efforts to project a serious tone about artificial intelligence, it has lagged behind competitors, and
Recode reports that it has now hired Carnegie Mellon's Russ Salakhutdinov as its new head of artificial intelligence research.
IBM IS COUNTING ON ITS BET ON WATSON, AND PAYING BIG MONEY FOR IT It's hard to imagine a computer industry without IBM, but it's obvious to anyone watching that Big Blue has struggled to make its way in growing markets.
Steve Lohr of The New York Times has a good update on IBM's big bet on Watson, its cognitive computing powerhouse that might just make it a player in an AI-driven cloud market.
CLOUD COMPUTING DISRUPTS SOFTWARE ACCOUNTING RULES On the wonky side this week, the
Wall Street Journal checks in on how accounting rules have failed to keep up with changes in the way software is developed and sold. Research and development costs are generally considered hardware or infrastructure costs, and research into software development advances is harder to reconcile on a balance sheet, according to current laws.