AWS tries a telco tack; Teradata's new vector
Today on Product Saturday: AWS spruces up its Outposts server gear for wireless carriers, Teradata jumps on the vector database train, and the quote of the week.
Billions of dollars have already been invested over the last year retrofitting data centers to accommodate AI workloads in one of the biggest inflection points in data-center architecture in decades.
Welcome to Runtime! Today: why cloud providers are falling short with a key segment of the market, OpenAI's Thanksgiving-week management turmoil made customers consider their options, and the quote of the week.
Today: why enterprise vendor promises to indemnify customers against AI lawsuits could be easier said than done, an insider's view on AWS at a crossroads, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
Enterprise tech vendors promised customers that they will indemnify them from legal claims made against the output produced by generative AI tools. However, none of those companies want to talk about how it will actually work.
Today: how Deloitte's point person on AWS is thinking about cost optimization and generative AI, the Big Three cloud providers join forces with the Big Two AI model makers, and the latest funding in enterprise tech.
Today: how GitHub is trying to introduce new AI features without alienating its core user base, Google unveils its latest AI supermodel, and the latest moves in enterprise tech.
Today: why AWS is building an applications business with a specific focus, Microsoft and Google report cloud earnings, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
Today: why Principal Financial Group splits its workloads between AWS and MIcrosoft Azure, Google Cloud becomes the latest to offer customers generative AI indemnity protections, and this week in enterprise moves.
Today: Runtime read the 254-page Ofcom report on cloud computing competition so you don't have to, Microsoft's GitHub is losing a lot of money serving up code suggestions, and the latest funding for enterprise tech startups.
Today: why evaluating software developers like salespeople is misguided, IBM promises legal protection for generative AI customers, and the latest moves in enterprise tech.
If we assume that every company has become a software company, that means software developers have become some of the most valuable (and expensive) employees on the payroll. How do companies know they're getting the most out of their investment in those employees?
Today: AWS CEO Adam Selipsky holds court in Seattle, Google gets ready to challenge OpenAI, and the quote of the week.