Re: FaaS> "They innovate but they also deliver and know when to cut and run."
Hmm. I'm just wondering what Amazon has cut and run on... Its Fire smartphone? I'd say that project morphed into the Fire tablets and Amazon Echo devices. Maybe it's better to say Amazon knows how to pivot really well?
Has Amazon cut and run on its search engine? Not really, it just focuses its search algorithm development on things other than "general search" like Google's main consumer service.
Just curious what else Amazon has cut and run on.... hmmm...
Re: FaaSAmazon has been such an interesting evolution I think their value lies in being masters of execution. They innovate but they also deliver and know when to cut and run. They are a much more interesting company now than they were at inception because now they are really a technology behemoth not an online retailer.
Re: FaaSI think you're right about Amazon. They have a very good start with Alexa. They were able to get early adopters to buy into the idea of digital assistants.
Re: FaaSIt would seem that Amazon will most likely take the lead in the area, even as Google, Microsoft and IBM have geared up as well. And as IoT exploded in coming years the "serverless" idea will certainly be a boon to development in that area.
FaaSThe FaaS category seems to be something that really simplifies developers’ life making it much easier to develop, run, and manage application functionality.
Cato says simple SD-WAN doesn't cut it anymore for enterprise customers, who need SD-WAN combined with security, mobile and cloud connectivity, delivered over the cloud. It's all about a new industry buzzword: Secure Access Service Edge (SASE).
Cisco is fundamentally changing its business strategy to support selling disaggregated components, in addition to integrated solutions, in a bid to win business from hyperclouds such as Amazon and Microsoft.
Cisco's collaboration boss Amy Chang sits down with Light Reading's Mitch Wagner to share stories about videoconferencing facepalm moments and discuss Cisco's collaboration vision in this mini-episode of the Light Reading podcast.
We're packing our bags for Dallas, for our cleverly named Network Virtualization and SDN Americas conference, but first we sat down to talk about NV, SDN and our favorite travel snack.
Will Apple's new iPhone 11 grow telco profits? Will Apple TV+ compete in a crowded OTT market? And why does everybody have fabulous hair in an Apple TV+ series where civilization has collapsed because everybody in the world is blind?
Hmm. I'm just wondering what Amazon has cut and run on... Its Fire smartphone? I'd say that project morphed into the Fire tablets and Amazon Echo devices. Maybe it's better to say Amazon knows how to pivot really well?
Has Amazon cut and run on its search engine? Not really, it just focuses its search algorithm development on things other than "general search" like Google's main consumer service.
Just curious what else Amazon has cut and run on.... hmmm...