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Sales quota reductions at Microsoft and OpenAI are seen as a signal that the enterprise tech world is ‘finally returning to reality.’
Microsoft promises its customers in Europe greater sovereignty with new cloud offerings. However, analysts describe the offer as a smokescreen.
The Swedish industrial manufacturer is helping technicians troubleshoot equipment issues with its AI Factory Companion, powered by Azure OpenAI.
AI agents are poised to transform the enterprise landscape, from automating mundane tasks to driving customer service and innovation. But having strong guardrails in place will be key to success.
The increases are set to take effect April 1, and seem to be a strategic push by Microsoft to get customers to move to its other platforms.
The world’s largest software company paid a mere €54,000 to join CISPE as a non-voting member, but Amazon still voted to block Microsoft from joining at all.
CEO Satya Nadella speaks of an even more Azure-centric environment: “Azure must become the infrastructure for AI, while we build our AI platform and developer tools on top of it.”
In the fight against Chinese AI ambitions, Microsoft is demanding more support from the incoming Trump administration. The tech giant’s tone is becoming more nationalistic.
Ignoring those minimum requirements, such as TPM 2.0, could lead to woe, the company says.
The UK class action lawsuit accuses Microsoft of using its Windows market share to overcharge clients running it on AWS, Google, or Alibaba cloud offerings instead of Microsoft Azure.
Teaming up with industry partners such as Bayer and Rockwell Automation, Microsoft is adding pre-trained small language models to its Azure AI catalog aimed at highly specialized use cases.
The company announced a slate of enhancements to its data analytics platform, including Fabric Databases, which can provision auto-optimizing and auto-scaling AI databases in seconds.
Microsoft has accused its cloud competitor of bringing it into disrepute with authorities and politicians. But both companies have issues around fair licensing and monopolistic practices to address in the eyes of regulators.
It’s estimated that nearly 50% of business leaders are planning to increase investment in agentic AI within the next year—driving a new era of proactive and autonomous risk management across industries.
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