IBM gets Gaudi 3 Enterprise AI to the Cloud
IBM is the Secret Sauce for Gaudi 3
In a surprise development, Intel announced that IBM plans to deploy Intel Gaudi 3 accelerators as a service in the IBM cloud to help enterprises scale AI. IBM is a huge business-oriented company; such a partnership goes a long way.
Google Cloud’s biggest blunder
Deleted a major customer’s account
Google Cloud accidentally deleted a giant customer account, along with its back-ups for no reason.
Companies get off of their clouds
Firms ditch online data for old-school servers
It is starting to look like the cloud bubble is bursting as more firms return to on-site data centres.
Cloudy with a chance of rip-off
Ex-geek warns cloud could go the same way as mainframes
A former software engineer has warned that cloud setups could end up the same way as the old mainframes,
Vodafone signs AI deal with Microsoft
Phone giant teams up with Microsoft for AI and cloud
Vodafone has signed a 10-year deal with Microsoft to use the tech monster's artificial intelligence and cloud technology.
Oxide launches "first commercial cloud" computer
Cloud in your own company
Oxide, a startup founded by computing experts from Joyent and Dell, launched what it calls the world's first "commercial cloud computer."
Cloud is getting too expensive
Bringing things in-house is saving cash.
It is starting to look like the cloud companies are charging too much, and customers are voting with their feet.
Cloud gaming still tricky
Warns Sony
Sony's chief executive has warned that cloud gaming is still technically "very tricky," playing down the risk to the console maker of the industry quickly converting to a technology on which its rival Microsoft has invested shedloads of cash.
EU regulators look at Microsoft's Azure
Claims that Vole is nibbling at rivals again
Microsoft's Azure cloud business has been targeted by the European Union's antitrust arm, amid concerns the US software firm is leveraging its market power to squeeze out rivals.
Cloud sales starting to slow
Analysts expecting the slowest growth for a decade
Demand for cloud-computing services is slowing and Microsoft and Amazon are expected to report the slowest revenue growth for their cloud-computing businesses since the firms started breaking out performance last decade.