Sienna Group says its cloud-based managed services offering for behavior analytics vendor Interset will save customers money and allow for more flexibility as end-user environments change.
As the cloud applications company grows rapidly by making hiring and infrastructure investments, there have been signs some investors are getting impatient.
The EMC CEO is bullish about the beneficial impacts a Dell-EMC combination will have on VMware shareholders and reveals new information about Virtustream on the company's earnings call.
Despite falling short of analyst predications, AT&T's Q32015 revenues were up 19 percent year-over-year thanks to its DirectTV acquisition. Meanwhile, Business Solutions revenues grew a modest 1.2 percent.
Microsoft's first-quarter earnings report reveals success with the company's Azure cloud platform, which was responsible for an 8 percent boost to revenue.
The new platform integrates sales, on-boarding and servicing functionality, aiming to give MSPs an 'end-to-end story' that will keep them connected to customers.
Michael Dell argues that customers want to do business with fewer suppliers as the IT landscape shifts toward new capabilities in virtualization and hyper-converged infrastructure, he said during a press conference at the annual Dell World conference being held this week in Austin, Texas.
The Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 is potentially coming back to the table for a vote this week, causing waves of controversy in the tech industry about the balance between security and information privacy.
HP Cloud Business Unit General Manager Bill Hilf says HP is shuttering its public cloud effort, focusing its resources instead on its managed and virtual private cloud offerings.
Lenovo Monday unveiled its answer to Microsoft's Surface Book laptop -- the Lenovo Yoga 900 convertible ultrabook. How do the two high-end laptops stack up?
With all the talk about whether Dell can handle the overlap between its Compellent storage and EMC's VNX, it's easy to forget that Dell has been successfully managing multiple overlapping storage lines for years.
Michael Dell and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella drew a bold line under their commitment to open systems, saying serving customers well is each company's focus, even if that means the two technology giants increasingly go head-to-head in hardware.
Partners say they are shocked and disappointed to see the highly regarded executive leave just as the enterprise security company was attempting to breathe new life into its channel.