Category: Hybrid Cloud, Infrastructure, and Operations

HPE launches the Open Distributed Infrastructure Management initiative as an open source program aimed at easing the complexity of large-scale geographically distributed physical infrastructure deployments in 5G environments, but HPE must show it can outflank the competition in order to generate broad operator support.
In light of the continued challenges being driven by Covid-19, HPE Aruba are donating resources to aid in wireless for makeshift hospitals and more.
Zoho has decided to make its entire portfolio of applications free for small businesses under 25 employees for the next two months in a sound businesss move.
HPE is wagering heavily that service providers are ready to overhaul their mobile cores and purchasing models, especially for nascent 5G environments. HPE’s 5G Core Stack targets accelerating operator monetization of 5G networks, but can the new offering beat a formidable array of competitors and their own cloud-native solutions?
Big changes in AI, machine learning applications, tools, techniques, platforms, and standards are on the horizon.
While the markets are in chaos, Oracle showed strength as the company delivered its best revenue growth in 2 years while also topping earnings expectations.
Multicloud computing has become the hottest theme in enterprise networking this year. What does this mean for the future?
Cloudera delivered its Q4 earnings where the company beat expectations on revenue and EPS while delivering solid customer growth and news on product roadmap.
It is apparent that NVIDIA recognizes its current market-leading status in AI chipsets won’t necessary last forever. By focusing on the enterprise stack—the data center, enterprise computing, and all things related to the future of AI in the enterprise, the company plots a path forward that allows it to sustain its impressive growth record. The company’s acquisition of SwiftStack provides NVIDIA with a software-driven data storage and management platform for acceleration of deep learning, analytics, and high-performance computing applications across multiclouds.
Google Cloud partnering with AT&T to build 5G edge computing solutions is a move toward helping telcos optimize for 5G wireless applications. It’s also a move that’s central to Google’s strategy of moving the company beyond its core ad business and working to claim a larger share of the enterprise cloud business. What’s most noteworthy about this announcement from Google Cloud is the breadth of its strategy for partnering with 5G carriers, including, but not limited to, AT&T. Here’s a look at that in greater depth.

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