Success of GitHub deal hinges on Azure’s open source appeal

Microsoft is of the mindset that once it gets a customer on Azure, it can expand the account from there. In an ideal world, this acquisition could start developers thinking of Microsoft as a ‘go-to’ in terms of open source. — Kelsey Mason, Senior Analyst

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Dell’s post-EMC acquisition debt could dampen future progress

Dell Technologies has reported a 19 per cent year-on-year revenue surge for the three months ending 4 May, to US$21.4 million, but the debt burden arising from the company’s 2016 EMC acquisition remains a challenge.

 

Practical info on tap at SAP Sapphire Now 2018

It will be interesting to see how they take all of their various [CRM] front-office assets — Hybris, Callidus, Gigya — and create one comprehensive suite and how they tie Leonardo, specifically the AI and IoT aspects, to that portfolio. I expect that CRM rebrand to share center stage with S/4HANA and SAP Leonardo, and the theme once again will be the intelligent enterprise. — Kelsey Mason, Senior Analyst

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VMware’s tech partner collaboration ramps up revenue

The company continues to invest in [research and development] to build out its capabilities, underscored by recent updates to vSphere, Workspace ONE, vRealize and vSAN as well as partner-led container updates through Pivotal, which recently underwent its own IPO. — Cassandra Mooshian, Senior Analyst

 

JEDI is the force leading AWS’ charge into the U.S. Department of Defense

The DOD’s JEDI cloud contract illustrates how IT prowess enables a strong national security posture. Central governments, even more than the largest commercial enterprises, struggle to keep pace with the current rate of technological change. Many times, major decisions do not occur proactively, but rather are made in response to gaps in capabilities that become matters of national security. The U.S. Department of Defense’s (DOD) Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) contract indicates the DOD finds itself in that very position, spurred by a need to address technology gaps resulting from a decades-long lapse in investment that started with the end of the Cold War. — Cassandra Mooshian, Senior Analyst; and Joey Cresta, Analyst

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5G will support growth in the deployment and professional services markets, while slowing the decline of maintenance spend due to decommissioning and NFV/SDN

HAMPTON, N.H. (May 31, 2018) — According to Technology Business Research, Inc.’s (TBR) Telecom Infrastructure Services North America Market Forecast 2017-2022, the North America telecom infrastructure services (TIS) market will grow through the forecast period for three key reasons: Tax reform will stimulate capex investment; digital transformation initiatives will drive spend; and 5G investment will be pulled forward and accelerated by the big four operators in the U.S. to obtain or retain a competitive advantage. Spend pertaining to these overarching trends will be partly offset by cost savings from legacy infrastructure decommissioning, cloud, and NFV/SDN as well as synergies that are realized from M&A. TBR estimates the market will grow at a CAGR of 0.6% from 2017 to 2022.

“The big four operators in the U.S. intend to commercially deploy 5G as soon as late 2018, with deployments set to ramp up in 2019 and through the remainder of the forecast period,” said TBR Telecom Senior Analyst Michael Soper. “5G requires significant investments in fiber and upgrades in the network backbone and access layer, all of which will drive spend on TIS. 5G will slow the pace of decline in the maintenance market in the later years of the forecast period, but will not return the maintenance market to growth due to the aforementioned decommissioning and NFV/SDN.”

Vendors largely showed growth in North America in 2017. Although vendors with hardware exposure had flat or declining TIS revenue, suppliers grew sales if they had services and software portfolios aligned to operator transformation needs. Ericsson’s revenue declined predominantly due to the rescoped Sprint managed services contract. Cloud service provider spend remains robust in the U.S., helping Accenture and Nokia post growth in the region despite ongoing weak spend by telecom operators. Other vendors, particularly Juniper, are also obtaining a greater portion of TIS revenue from cloud service providers. Looking toward 2018 and beyond, IT services firms and software-centric companies, particularly Accenture, Amdocs, Tech Mahindra and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), are best positioned to help operators capitalize on the digital economy.

TBR’s Telecom Infrastructure Services North America Market Forecast provides annual analysis and forecasting of the deployment, maintenance, professional services and managed services markets for network and IT suppliers.

 

Analysis: HP thrives on consolidation, enjoys a strong quarter in all its businesses

Despite its central position in two flat markets, personal computers and printing, HP has reported double-digit annual revenue growth in both, and double-digit operating profit growth in PCs for its most recent quarter. Growth in printing was, in part, inorganic, following on the company’s acquisition of Samsung’s print business, named S-print. At the same time, the printing business operating profit growth was only 1.6% year-to-year, and operating margin decreased 140 basis points to 16.0%, a consequence of the costs of incorporating S-print. — Daniel Callahan, Analyst

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Analysis: Lenovo can see light at end of tunnel as PC, data center businesses grow

Lenovo last week reported double-digit revenue and operating profit growth as its core PC and Smart Devices (PCSD) business thrived with 15.9% annual revenue growth and its Data Center Group enjoyed 43.8% year-to-year growth. The Moto mobile devices business shrunk, however, recording a 24.3% reduction in revenue. Profitability improved across all three groups, with increased PC pre-tax income, and reduced pre-tax losses in both data center and smartphone businesses. — Daniel Callahan, Analyst

The value imperative: Healthcare IT services vendors reorient around value-centric models of care delivery and payment

Traditional paradigms for healthcare payment and delivery are transforming into models that offer enhanced value, accountability, transparency and patient outcomes. To pivot with the market and its embrace of value over volume, healthcare organizations are reorienting themselves and their health IT infrastructures to become more data-driven, patient-centric and value-focused. Join us Sept. 26 as we discuss how healthcare IT services (HITS) vendors are evolving their solutions and go-to-market approaches to effectively navigate the changing healthcare market.

Join John Caucis as he reviews TBR’s most recent Healthcare IT Services Benchmark and discusses the trends shaping the HITS market in 2018.

 

Could cloud cast a shadow over Dell’s bottom line?

Cloud casts a shadow over Dell Technologies’ upbeat view of the future … . Specifically, the mega-scale global public cloud threatens the company’s margins. Dell Technologies is a vendor to public cloud providers, but because of the small number of major public cloud vendors and those companies’ technological self-sufficiency, the greater the percentage of computing and storage housed in public clouds, the lower the potential for Dell Technologies’ bottom line. — Stanley Stevens, Practice Manager and Principal Analyst; and Ezra Gottheil, Principal Analyst