Microsoft expands cloud service in push for $10 billion Pentagon contract
Microsoft Corp said on Tuesday its expanded Azure cloud service to help government clients save data on their own servers would be available by the end of the first quarter of 2019, as it battles with Amazon for a $10 billion Pentagon contract.
Microsoft Corp said on Tuesday its expanded Azure cloud service to help government clients save data on their own servers would be available by the end of the first quarter of 2019, as it battles with Amazon for a $10 billion Pentagon contract.
The two companies are left in the fray for the lucrative contract after Alphabet Inc’s Google dropped out on Monday, saying the company’s new ethical guidelines do not align with the project.
Pentagon’s JEDI, or Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, cloud computing solution contract is part of the Department of Defense’s efforts to modernize its IT infrastructure.
The expanded Azure Government Secret cloud service will make Microsoft “a strong option for the JEDI contract,” said Julia White, corporate vice president of Microsoft Azure, adding that the company is capable of meeting the highest classification requirement for handling “top secret U.S. classified data”.
-
Japan’s cherry blossom festival canceled in Fujiyoshida; Here’s what to know
-
Florida state employee jailed for over $1.5m fake claims scam
-
North Korea executes teens over ‘Squid Game’ as K-Pop crackdown intensifies
-
Hong Kong media tycoon 'Jimmy Lai' to be sentenced on Feb. 9: How the world sees it
-
Netherlands repatriates 3500-year-old Egyptian sculpture looted during Arab Spring
-
Australia, Indonesia sign new security pact to strengthen ties
-
Trump declares ‘complete endorsement’ of Sanae Takaichi ahead of crucial snap election
-
Archaeologists recreate 3,500-year-old Egyptian perfumes for modern museums