Stream this episode to hear from the head of the IBM Hybrid Cloud and former Bank of America CTO Howard Boville about industry cloud & more.
IBM
Senior VP of IBM Cloud Howard Boville shared in a recent conversation his POV on industry clouds, business processes, and much more.
Good news for IBM, which rebounds nicely from last quarter’s measly 8% growth in cloud revenue with strong Q1 results.
With Microsoft, Amazon and IBM generating $163 billion in 2021 cloud revenue together, the Cloud Wars leaders are raking in cash.
I talked with IBM Cloud Platform CTO and VP Jason McGee about the new Cloud Satellite offering, a major step forward for IBM.
Q4 financials from IBM show a cloud growth rate of 8%. In the competitive cloud industry, this means they are rapidly falling behind the leaders.
IBM’s cloud business is in great position to have a breakout year in 2021, but IBM will need to fully commit its full resources to the cloud.
The three vendors whose cloud revenue is growing most rapidly are Google at 44.8%, Oracle 33% (estimated), and Microsoft 31%.
Market-cap madness: the market cap of ServiceNow rose to $101 billion while that of its new AI partner IBM slumped to $104.5 billion.
During one of the greatest enterprise-tech markets ever, why does IBM have 4 zero-growth businesses with weak connections to its strategy?
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna should use Monday’s Q3 earnings announcement to clarify five key issues essential to IBM’s future.
Why IBM CEO Arvind Krishna should keep swinging at every part of IBM that is not precisely aligned with their newly streamlined vision.
It’s both ironic and fitting that three so-called “legacy” vendors are battling for leadership in the modern and massive hybrid-cloud market.
An overview of what we know and don’t know about the high-level details of Microsoft Azure revenue and Microsoft cloud revenue in general.
In contrast with Salesforce, ServiceNow and IBM, Larry Ellison and Oracle have all but banished “platform” from their public presentations.
With a 43% revenue-growth rate that was much higher than those of its larger rivals, Google Cloud continued to be the fastest-growing major cloud vendor.
From January when his appointment was announced until April 6 when became CEO, Arvind Krishna did 5 things very well in his debut quarter.
Building on an alliance launched half a century ago, IBM and SAP are calling their new initiative “the evolution partnership.”
Will infrastructure leader Amazon acquire Zoom, in preparation for the digital future and to grab back the microphone in the Cloud Wars?
Despite COVID-19’s economic toll, Microsoft’s strong Q1 growth indicates that the 5 largest cloud vendors could generate cloud revenue of $150B+ in 2020.