Synadia backs down from CNCF trademark dispute
Today: A deep dive into a dispute between the backers of NATS and the CNCF, which is just the latest example of changing norms in open-source software, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
Today on Product Saturday: Jetbrains has a take on the inevitable collision of AI and IDEs, Qdrant's vector search performance gets a GPU upgrade, and the quote of the week.
Today: OpenAI unveils its take on AI agents that promise to take all the drudgery out of using a computer, more on the massive Project Stargate circus, and this week's enterprise moves.
Today: OpenAI reveals its plan to build $500 billion worth of data centers in the U.S., why Oracle's decision to keep TikTok running could backfire down the road, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
Today on Product Saturday: Nvidia and Snowflake try to get more enterprises on the AI train by focusing on safety and costs, and the quote of the week.
Today: Visual Studio Code fueled Microsoft's decade-long enterprise winning streak, but new challenges loom, why Google and Microsoft are forcing you to use their AI tools, and the latest enterprise moves.
Visual Studio Code is a vital pieces of Microsoft's enterprise strategy, which banks on the goodwill developers have for both products to drive business to Azure and its other enterprise software products. But software development practices and preferences are changing rapidly.
AI use cases are becoming more powerful and pervasive across the software delivery lifecycle, but adopting any new technology comes with some risks. Nine members of our Roundtable discussed how technology leaders can reap the benefits of AI software-development tools while avoiding the pitfalls.
Why CISOs are worried about security risks from the headlong rush to adopt generative AI apps, Microsoft gives Jay Parikh a broad mandate, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.
Today: HashiCorp co-founder Mitchell Hashimoto is back with a new terminal emulator, Microsoft moves one of its Phi LLMs into the open, and the quote of the week.
Today: Why Crusoe thinks enterprises want a catered AI experience, Jensen Huang tanks quantum -computing stocks, and the latest enterprise moves.
Even companies eager to jump on the GenAI bandwagon have struggled to organize their data and get past deployment hurdles, and nobody likes to spend all that time, effort, and money to build technology that can't be shipped because it can't be trusted.
Happy New Year! Today: after years of hype and investment, enterprise generative AI applications are still awaiting their breakout moment, the data-center investment boom continues, and the latest funding rounds in enterprise tech.