Microsoft shares tumbled Thursday after the company’s weaker-than-expected fiscal second-quarter cloud growth prompted some analysts to be more cautious about the stock.
Yet Caldas told us that Microsoft suggests Azure Local as the tech customers use for workloads that aren’t suitable to run in the cloud. That seeming contradiction is explained by Microsoft’s ...
The Windows maker’s revenue rose 12% year-on-year to $69.6 billion in Q2 FY25, with net profit surging 10% to $24.1 billion.
Microsoft's second quarter fiscal 2025 earnings show impressive growth in AI revenue, despite slightly slower Azure growth. Read more here.