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: Google takes a shot at Microsoft, promising signs for enterprise tech infrastructure in Africa, and the quote of the week.
Today: System Initiative launches a new visually oriented approach to managing infrastructure, AWS throws money at generative AI, and this week in enterprise moves.
The startup has raised $18 million in funding to create a private beta of what Jacob called a "simulator" that models a company's tech infrastructure — on either cloud services or on-premises servers — using digital twins technology.
Today: cybersecurity software remains in demand despite tight budgets, HPE jumps into the cloud infrastructure business (sort of), and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
Today: the latest example of why businesses don't trust Google's business services, Progress Software discloses a new vulnerability in MOVEit, and the quote of the week.
Today: Zoom's Smita Hashim on the hybrid work opportunity, the fallout from the Clop ransomware attacks reaches Washington, and this week in enterprise moves.
Smita Hashim's new job as Zoom's chief product officer is to help it become a broader player in enterprise software. In her view, this new era of hybrid work is opening up new product possibilities built for teams with a mixture of employees in the office and at remote locations.
Today: Stack Overflow's annual developer survey helps sort enterprise tech hype versus reality, AMD takes aim at a new rival, and the latest funding rounds raised by enterprise tech startups.
Today: the debate over compensating open-source maintainers takes on a new challenge thanks to supply chain security regulations, Microsoft promises customers its AI products will be totes legal, and this week in enterprise moves.
The open-source software movement unleashed a torrent of innovation and economic activity by creating free, reusable building blocks for the internet infrastructure that runs the world's economy. More than two decades later, the maintenance bill for those projects is coming due.
Today: F5 CEO François Locoh-Donou on zombie APIs, the MOVEit vulnerability finds a ransomware gang alive and well, and the latest funding rounds raised by enterprise tech startups.
F5 CEO François Locoh-Donou, now in his seventh year running the Seattle networking and security company, wants to be an "infrastructure agnostic" provider of software that helps companies manage and protect applications spread across the cloud and on-premises systems.