The race to cloud dominanceEscrito por Redacción TNI el 24/07/2018 a las 18:25:221036
Walmart had entered into a five year strategic partnership with Microsoft that would see the retail giant shift its business to both Microsoft Azure and Microsoft 365.
‘‘At first blush Walmart's announcement that it would use the Microsoft cloud platform and desktop apps across its entire business looks to be a direct shot across the bow of Amazon the retailer and Amazon the provider of public cloud services with Amazon Web Services (AWS). ‘‘Certainly from Walmart’s perspective as a cloud retailer, this partnership means the world in terms of matching Amazon blow-for-blow in reach and scale. And from Microsoft’s vantage point, this five year deal stands as unassailable proof point that it's indeed ready to lead the hyperscale public cloud provider marketplace. That’s true at least in terms of proving Microsoft’s ability to attract mega brands like Walmart.com and Samsclub.com. But there’s a lot more to this deal than simple one-upmanship in the race to cloud dominance. ‘‘For Walmart to successfully compete against Amazon as a retailer, it will need to beat Amazon at its own game. That means speeding up its effort to deploy a cashier-less checkout system across a sizable brick and mortar footprint. For that, the company does not need backend scalability per say. Rather, it needs a partner capable of solving big data problems, wrangling Internet of Things (IoT) devices and plying artificial intelligence (AI) -- all from the vantage point of a single cloud platform. This is the underlying technological current flowing beneath the Microsoft and Walmart partnership. ‘‘By partnering with Microsoft, Walmart’s internal development staff can work within the confines of a lifecycle-complete environment that blends Microsoft’s own best of breed software (SQL Server, Office 365, etc.) with open source solutions such as Apache Hadoop and Tensorflow -- all supported by a set of rapidly consumable services designed to solve domain specific tasks like predictive modelling, visual recognition, device management and data analysis.’’ |