Microsoft Azure stories
Cloud and AI demand is driving heavy investment in new facilities, with the global market forecast to more than triple by 2034.
Users of Claude should see fewer peak-time slowdowns as Anthropic secures more AWS capacity and Amazon adds USD $5 billion to its stake.
The update promises better software engineering and longer task handling for users, while keeping Claude Opus 4.7 at the same price.
Manufacturers could cut engineering work by half as Schneider Electric and Microsoft use Azure AI to streamline plant design and operations.
Some of DTCC’s most critical clearing systems will move to the public cloud for the first time after US regulator approval.
Professional services firms may soon query staffing, capacity and project finances in Teams as Dayshape embeds its tools in Microsoft 365 Copilot.
Mismanaged cloud bills are draining budgets by 20-35%, with AI workloads adding fresh risk and hidden waste often going unchecked.
Many organisations face higher renewal costs as Microsoft tightens Enterprise Agreement access and shifts customers toward newer licensing models.
Growing fears over harvest-now, decrypt-later attacks are driving demand for quantum-safe controls as data moves to edge systems and cloud services.
Downtime at large employers could fall as the new system flags workplace IT faults before staff are disrupted.
The update gives security teams earlier warning on vulnerable container images before they reach production, reducing blind spots across cloud estates.
Auditors will spend less time on routine checks as EY embeds multi-agent AI into its global Assurance workflows through Canvas.
The rollout puts AI into 160,000 audits and could cut administrative work as EY braces for bigger data volumes and tougher assurance demands.
The deal could cut admin and speed up decisions for more than one million businesses across Australia and New Zealand.
Developers gain faster tools for speech, voice and image apps as Microsoft adds three in-house MAI models to Foundry and Copilot.
Local firms and agencies are using Microsoft’s AI and cloud tools to lift productivity, as the company’s NZ impact reaches NZ$9.4 billion in FY25.
Enterprises will be able to move data and run workloads privately between Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and AWS without using the public internet.
Trusted vendors are more likely to be shortlisted, secure approval and command better pricing in complex enterprise deals.
The Manchester IT provider must keep investing in staff and service quality to retain a rare trio of Microsoft designations.
The pact secures 3.5 gigawatts of next-generation chip capacity from 2027 as enterprise demand for Claude surges past USD $30 billion a year.