Don’t take Oracle’s cloud-superiority claims too seriously
Oracle’s relative low investments in cloud computing make it hard to justify its claims of superiority for IaaS and PaaS
Oracle’s relative low investments in cloud computing make it hard to justify its claims of superiority for IaaS and PaaS
OpenShift gets all the attention, but the Ansible configuration automation for devops shows how to moving to the future seem boring
Microsoft, while maintaining its commitment to Windows, has made the necessary steps to not merely run on Linux but to help shape the future of Linux
LinkedIn is a model for producing open source code that really matters to a community—and highlights why developers would want to work for you
Unless Google can get its serverless act together, it may end up winning the container battle but losing the cloud war
Amazon’s new membership in the CNCF isn’t matched by actual code contributions to the Google-driven container project. That could ultimately hurt AWS
The web needed a freewheeling programming language like JavaScript, but now it’s time to set some rules
Amazon's intelligent personal assistant has amassed more than 15,000 skills. If only we could find them
What happens if Google finds more efficient ways to drive paying customers to the Google Cloud Platform and other services?
Apple’s impressive iOS machine learning technology teeters between its limits and its ease of adoption by developers
If Amazon's competitors think they can win customers with better pricing, they should think again
Microsoft says its new Azure cloud database is all types of databases in one. Here's why that might be a problem
As Red Hat homes in on VMware, investing development resources in Kubernetes, Project Atomic, and other container-related efforts will pay off far more than propping up OpenStack
The early days of open source were fraught with religious animosities we feared would tear apart the movement: free software fundamentalists haggling with open source pragmatists over how many Apache licenses would fit on the head of a pin. But once commercial interests moved in to plunder for profit, the challenges faced by open source pivoted toward issues of control.