
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I explain why deep on-premises expertise is becoming a strategic advantage in the AI-driven cloud economy.
Highlights
00:03 — One of the things we're seeing here in early 2026, as so many things change around the tech industry and customer expectations, is that three old timers in the Cloud Wars Top 10 —Microsoft, SAP, and Oracle — for each company, 50% or more of its revenue comes from the cloud.
00:56 — So these are, in some ways, the graybeards, and some people have tried to position them as legacy companies, or ones that reflect the past and not the future. I think all three companies have done a fantastic job of moving into a very different sort of future. This legacy term that some people apply to them was initially meant as a put-down.
01:51 — They've got cloud expertise now, and these three companies, I think, are doing so well in the cloud in part because they understand the traditional landscape that their customers have operated in. Microsoft's total revenue for the quarter ended December 31: $81.3 billion. Of that, $51.5 billion in the cloud — that's 58%.
03:05 — So this idea of legacy, which was initially meant as a put-down, an insult, that dismissal of these companies — that's one of the silliest ideas that has come along in a long time. I think this also serves as an occasion for all of us to think about some terms and concepts that had a lot of currency in the past that might not in the future.
04:13 — We've got to look with fresh eyes, a fresh mindset about what's new, what's important, what isn't, and not carry forward the ideas or the models, the templates of the past into what's rapidly becoming a very, very different future. I’ve got a detailed article going into this and offer some more perspectives on this move.
Visit Cloud Wars for more.
By Bob Evans4.7
1717 ratings
In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I explain why deep on-premises expertise is becoming a strategic advantage in the AI-driven cloud economy.
Highlights
00:03 — One of the things we're seeing here in early 2026, as so many things change around the tech industry and customer expectations, is that three old timers in the Cloud Wars Top 10 —Microsoft, SAP, and Oracle — for each company, 50% or more of its revenue comes from the cloud.
00:56 — So these are, in some ways, the graybeards, and some people have tried to position them as legacy companies, or ones that reflect the past and not the future. I think all three companies have done a fantastic job of moving into a very different sort of future. This legacy term that some people apply to them was initially meant as a put-down.
01:51 — They've got cloud expertise now, and these three companies, I think, are doing so well in the cloud in part because they understand the traditional landscape that their customers have operated in. Microsoft's total revenue for the quarter ended December 31: $81.3 billion. Of that, $51.5 billion in the cloud — that's 58%.
03:05 — So this idea of legacy, which was initially meant as a put-down, an insult, that dismissal of these companies — that's one of the silliest ideas that has come along in a long time. I think this also serves as an occasion for all of us to think about some terms and concepts that had a lot of currency in the past that might not in the future.
04:13 — We've got to look with fresh eyes, a fresh mindset about what's new, what's important, what isn't, and not carry forward the ideas or the models, the templates of the past into what's rapidly becoming a very, very different future. I’ve got a detailed article going into this and offer some more perspectives on this move.
Visit Cloud Wars for more.

32,271 Listeners

26,401 Listeners

6,125 Listeners

10,203 Listeners

675 Listeners