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The service disruption in the Azure East US region reveals capacity problems that are happening more often. Enterprises need to rethink their strategies, enforce stricter SLAs, and accept that public clouds are still vulnerable.
Recent government sanctions are causing public cloud providers to wonder if they must act as unofficial enforcers. Some businesses are responding by moving to private or sovereign clouds.
A new survey reveals that enterprises are purchasing their hardware rather than relying on public cloud providers. Their reasons are not surprising.
Startup leverages infrastructure-as-code principles to enable cloning, migration, and remapping of infrastructure across heterogeneous clouds.
The big providers spend a lot on artificial intelligence, but they are not offering the things enterprises care about most. Here are the important questions to ask.
The market is moving beyond the Big Three as enterprises seek more customized options for their industry, location, or workload. Platform selection is becoming a critical strategic decision.
Don’t wait until an incident costs you billions of dollars to create backup and recovery plans.
Recent advancements are paving the way for private cloud platforms to deploy AI and other essential workloads, causing enterprises to rethink a public cloud–only strategy.
Enterprises are not as swayed today by fancy new bells and whistles from the Big Three cloud providers. They want commodity features: low prices, reliability, and regulatory compliance.
We won’t make progress with AI if we don’t know how to predict costs accurately. Enterprises are running in circles.