Cloud observability practices are complex—just like the cloud deployments they seek to understand. The insights observability offers make it a challenge worth tackling.
Cloud providers waste a lot of their customers’ cloud dollars, but enterprises can take action.
For years, private clouds pushed traditional on-prem hardware. Will the recent move towards specialized private clouds, especially for AI, be a win?
Will the new advances in serverless really address the problems enterprises have, or are they more hype to protect the public cloud providers’ investments?
Generative AI is causing excitement but not success for most enterprises. This needs to change quickly, but it will take some work that enterprises may not be willing to do.
Unsustainable demands for AI are on the horizon. People will soon have to stop fake-caring about cloud sustainability and give a damn for real.
IT management’s call for strategic alignment and cost efficiency is leading to a new era of choices that will drive cloud innovation and collaboration.
In some countries, the government is attempting to regulate cloud computing, and cloud providers are suing each other over competition and lock-in. Where does that leave enterprises?
AI and other forces are lessening the gravitational pull of public cloud platforms. This trend might be good for enterprises.
Despite soaring investments in artificial intelligence, the shortage of AI skills is stifling enterprise implementations.
We’re building too much complexity and are ill-trained to secure it. The result will be breach after breach, while enterprises wonder what happened. Get a clue now.
The construction of more data centers to support AI systems makes it hypocritical to discuss sustainability at the same time. Sustainable AI is an oxymoron right now.
How many enterprises are revisiting on-premises solutions in a cloud-dominated era for better cost management, security, and performance?
Too many businesses believe that adequate security is too expensive. Here are some ways to keep costs manageable.
Businesses are recognizing the benefits of specialized GPU clouds, general-purpose IaaS providers, and regional cloud options.
Companies think their only choices are repatriation or complaining about the high costs of the public cloud. There's a third option, but it takes work.
NIST recently published a report that garnered little attention, but it's a must-read document for people in business and law enforcement.
Companies suffer when cloud computing architects are not directly aligned with their business's overall goals. Let’s readjust our perspectives from purely technical.
The government’s intentions to promote cybersecurity for cloud-based AI are good, but its track record of successfully managing technology is poor.
As more enterprises leave the cloud or express real concern with rising prices, vendors must adapt to retain enterprise customers.