Crusoe wants to be the enterprise AI concierge
Today: Why Crusoe thinks enterprises want a catered AI experience, Jensen Huang tanks quantum -computing stocks, and the latest enterprise moves.
Today: inside HashiCorp's decision to stop providing software under an open-source license, why a different kind of chip was the talk of Black Hat in Las Vegas this week, and this week's enterprise moves.
HashiCorp announced Thursday that it is switching the license that governs the use of its open-source projects from the Mozilla Public License to the Business Source License (BSL), a license that does not meet the traditional definition of open source as described by the Open Source Initiative.
Today: why Asana's CIO thinks IT departments that spent wildly during the pandemic are overdue for some spring cleaning, Nvidia consolidates its central role in the AI boom, and the latest funding rounds for enterprise tech startups.
Cloud computing sparked an explosion of entrepreneurship in enterprise software, but 15 years later, the situation has gotten out of hand, according to Asana CIO Saket Srivastava.
Today: why cloud companies may need to rethink their reliance on certain kinds of carbon offset projects, why words matter when it comes to software licensing, and the quote of the week.
Today: AWS growth slows again but execs point to "stabilization," Tenable's CEO lashes out at Microsoft, and this week in enterprise moves.
Today: T-Mobile's data expert explains how the carrier is preparing for the future, New Relic succumbs to private equity, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
The only thing that hasn't changed about data in the nearly two decades that Vikas Ranjan has been shaping T-Mobile's data strategy is its strategic importance to the company.
Today: how AWS is trying to elbow its way into the generative AI conversation, a scary new flaw threatens cloud servers, and the quote of the week.
Today: a deep dive into Red Hat's decision to take on the rebuilders, Microsoft's curious definition of "all-up," and this week's enterprise moves.
Red Hat is probably the most successful open-source enterprise software company in the history of tech. For many years that success has existed in tension with the open-source software community, and this summer that tension rose to a new level.
Today: why a cloud spending revival has yet to arrive, Microsoft refutes a security report it helped shape, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.