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What Microsoft's ambitious plans for Azure mean to YOU
By Jason Ward last updated
Microsoft's Azure Cloud talk seems boring and mundane, but it's actually where all of the action is.

Dystopian abuse of Microsoft's powerful AI camera tech is all but inevitable
By Jason Ward last updated
Microsoft's AI-driven camera technology recognizes people, places and objects via millions of cameras already in use. Is a hyper-surveillance dystopia our future?

Microsoft must passionately market Surface Laptop to take on Apple's MacBook
By Jason Ward last updated
Microsoft wants MacBook-loving college students to switch to its new Surface Laptop. But is the company's marketing team ready to take on Apple?

Apple's new iPhones suggest the time is right for 'Surface Andromeda'
By Jason Ward last updated
Apple's powerful new iPhones are positioned to shift how we think of smartphones. These "mini tablet PCs" may suggest the time is right for Surface Andromeda.

With Windows 10 S and Surface Laptop, Microsoft takes aim at Google and Apple
By Jason Ward last updated
Microsoft lost ground to Google in schools in the U.S., and MacBooks appeal to many college students. With Windows 10 S and the Surface Book, Microsoft is striking back. Here's how.

Does Microsoft's Azure plan in a multi-cloud world ominously echo its Windows-everywhere past?
By Jason Ward last updated
Microsoft is striving to make its Azure cloud platform the world's dominant computing platform, but in a multi-cloud world is Microsoft too Azure-centric?

The relationship between Silicon Valley, Microsoft, President Trump, and the ideology of hate
By Jason Ward last updated
In the wake of a rise in white supremacist activity, violence and a proliferation of hate, Silicon Valley must be decisive in its stance against hatred and the use of its platforms.

Microsoft's #InsiderUp plans to make everyone a programmer for its global cloud ambitions
By Jason Ward last updated
Looking deeper into Microsoft's ambitious #InsiderUp program's goal to make everyone, everywhere a programmer.

Microsoft's mobile failures killed Windows phones and could hurt folding PCs
By Jason Ward last updated
Critics declared Microsoft's Windows phones dead long before its smartphones efforts actually failed. And they did so while the company was still actively "investing" in the phone-focused aspects of its mobile strategy.
All the latest news, reviews, and guides for Windows and Xbox diehards.