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Submission + - SPAM: Azure has an edge over AWS at big companies, Goldman Sachs survey says

soldersold writes: A Goldman Sachs survey of technology executives at large companies last month showed that Microsoft remained the most popular supplier of public cloud services, even as Amazon leads the market overall in terms of revenue.

The latest results suggest that Microsoft could continue to gain cloud market share. Microsoft stock has outpaced the major indices as CEO Satya Nadella has focused the company more on cloud services, particularly for business use. Further cloud growth could help bring the stock higher, as analysts expect.

An interesting comment I saw on Hacker News under this post:

> work for a Danish municipality with roughly 10,000 employees. I’m not sure if you know, but our public sector has been competing with Estonia at being the most digitised in the world for a decade. We operate an estimated 300-500 different IT-systems, some of them enterprise sized SAP solutions deployed on old IBM mainframes with multiple layers of APIs to make their fronts somewhat web-based (don’t ask). Others are minor time registration systems or automated vacation-payouts. I said estimated because a day-care institution is free (though advices not to) buy it-systems without talking with any part of the centralised organisation.
Microsoft has been one of our better partners in all of this. They aren’t cheap, but they listen to us when we need something. We have a direct line to Seattle, and parts of what we ring up at tickets have made it into the global 365 infrastructure. Stuff like making it easier to hide teams-emails from the company-wide outlook address-book.

More than that though, our tech-team is trained and certified in Microsoft technologies. The combination of in-house staff and a 30+ year long good business relationship makes Azure such an obvious choice for cloud. Some of the co-municipal systems we buy through a joint-owned organisation called KOMBIT operate in AWS (support and operations is handled by private sector companies), and it’s not like we’re religious about not using AWS or something other, but we’d need to build a relationship and retrain staff to do so.

Link to Original Source

Submission + - Facebook defends itself against op-ed calling for its breakup (theverge.com)

soldersold writes: On Thursday, Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes wrote an op-ed in The New York Times calling for the company to be broken up, saying that CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s “focus on growth led him to sacrifice security and civility for clicks,” and that he should be held accountable for his company’s mistakes.

Now, Facebook has responded an op-ed of its own, saying that its size isn’t the real problem and that its success as a platform shouldn’t be punished.

Submission + - First ungoogle Android smartphone (e.foundation)

getupstandup1 writes: This will probably the first fully "ungoogled" Android-based smartphone to hit the market ever: the /e/ smartphone will start to ship in June, on high-grade refurbished smartphones. While more and more people are concerned about privacy, it's interesting to see such initiative, especially considering that it was started by someone who is coming from the Linux distro world.

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