Global public cloud Q1 revenue cracks $126B
Operator and vendor revenues in the global public cloud market reached US$126 billion during the first quarter of 2022, a year-on-year increase of 26 per cent.
Operator and vendor revenues in the global public cloud market reached US$126 billion during the first quarter of 2022, a year-on-year increase of 26 per cent.
Vendor revenue from the global server market dipped during the second quarter of 2021 despite a slight uptick in server shipments.
COVID-19 played a significant role in the IT infrastructure market during the first quarter of 2020, causing sales revenue of cloud infrastructure to grow slightly and non-cloud infrastructure to fall by double digits.
Worldwide spending on cloud IT infrastructure grew in the fourth quarter of 2019 and the year overall, recording 12.4 per cent year-over-year for the quarter and 2.1 per cent year-over-year for 2019.
Dell Technologies and HPE remain locked together at the top of the worldwide server market following a “mixed bag” fourth quarter of 2019.
Dell Technologies and HPE remain locked at the top of a declining global server market, despite demand for enterprise compute “near historic highs”.
The number one position in the server market was shared by Dell and HPE during the second quarter, amid a decline in customer spending.
Dell and Hewlett Packard Enterprise are locked in battle at the top of the server market, as the tech giants edge clear of closest competitor IBM.
Vendor revenue in the worldwide enterprise storage systems market reached US$14 billion during the third quarter of 2018, headed by Dell Technologies.
The South Australian Government has signed a deal with Chinese ICT company, Inspur, which aims to establish a company presence in the state.
As part of a new partnership with Cloud-based infrastructure provider in China, Inspur Group, Brocade has incorporated Brocade’s SAN fabric technology into its I9000 Blade System.
With the Chinese government turning up the heat on foreign IT vendors, citing security concerns, IBM is finding help from an unlikely source: a competitor, local server vendor Inspur.
China continues to hold the top spot in the Top 500 supercomputer list, but the US still dominates, with 90 per cent of the systems on the list made by US vendors.
Chinese server vendors are making big gains in their home market, and putting pressure on U.S. rivals Hewlett-Packard and IBM in the "hyperscale" segment, according to research firm IDC. Dell, though, remains the country's number one server vendor.