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: turns out cloud migrations are hard, even when you work for the cloud company, Intel tries again to compete in the AI chip market, and the latest moves in enterprise tech.
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.
Nishita Henry's job involves helping Deloitte's clients find opportunities and avoid problems while operating on AWS. After several years of rapid change for clients that needed a cloud computing strategy, another disorienting time has arrived thanks to the rise of generative AI.
Today: the most pressing problem in enterprise tech has nothing to do with finding GPUs, Microsoft's OpenAI investment comes under regulatory scrutiny, and the quote of the week.
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.
GitHub plays a central role in modern software development. Plan to embed generative AI tech into a fundamental part of that experience has some developers concerned about a lack of focus.
Today: why OpenAI's COO doesn't think generative AI is an enterprise magic bullet, the Linux Foundation lays off staff, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
DocuSign's service was built before the cloud, but last year it realized it needed to move to the cloud to handle data residency requirements and its plans for AI services.
Today: DocuSign President Inhi Cho Suh explains its hybrid cloud strategy and plans for generative AI, Zoom takes on Microsoft Office and Google Docs, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
Today: how Cloudflare thinks it can outmaneuver the big clouds on the edge, Progress Software reveals another major vulnerability in a file-transfer product, and the quote of the week.
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?