Cloud Wars Live with Bob Evans

Bob Evans
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Mar 6, 2026 • 2min

Why OpenAI Adjusted Its Trillion-Dollar AI Infrastructure Plan

In today’s Cloud Wars Minute, I explore OpenAI’s decision to adjust its trillion-dollar AI infrastructure ambitions to reassure investors. Highlights 00:04 — Planned spending commitments amongst the Cloud Wars Top 10 companies have reached astronomical levels. This surge is in response to the anticipated demand for AI infrastructure, products, and services — a market that UN Trade and Development predicts will exceed $4.3 trillion by 2033. 00:25 — But in a trend-bucking move, OpenAI has informed investors that it's lowered its projected compute spending to $600 billion by 2030, down from the previously touted $1.4 trillion in infrastructure commitments announced in November by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. 00:46 — And this information came from a source that spoke to the news agency Reuters. The apparent shift aims to provide a more defined timeline for planned spending, alleviating concerns for investors who might view the $1.4 trillion figure as somewhat overly ambitious. 01:06 — CNBC also reported that OpenAI's total revenue for 2030 is expected to exceed $80 billion. The revised spending plan is designed, according to sources, to align more closely with this anticipated figure and reassure investors about the company’s growth trajectory. 01:54 — The balancing act for companies like OpenAI is a delicate one. It needs to demonstrate that it has the faith and support to fully commit to AI spending while also showing restraint to its investors. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Mar 5, 2026 • 3min

Evolving Enterprise Security with Microsoft Purview

Key Takeaways Microsoft leads in risk detection with tools like Defender XDR, but as enterprise data environments grow in scale and complexity, organizations now need AI‑driven security that can automatically investigate and manage risk across the entire data estate, not just detect it. With the January 2026 general release of Purview Data Security Investigations, Microsoft addresses the challenge of overwhelming data volumes by using generative AI to automatically analyze security signals across its tools and clearly summarize underlying risks so security teams can act faster and more confidently. Purview enables these outcomes through built-in capabilities that analyze risk at scale, including deep content risk examination with scoring and remediation guidance, vector search for non‑keyword discovery, and automatic categorization by risk, sensitivity, and subject to speed incident analysis. Purview integrates with Microsoft Sentinel’s graph to visually connect users, data, and activities across incidents and enables immediate mitigation—such as purging overshared sensitive content—allowing security teams to identify and contain risks in minutes instead of days, where speed can mean the difference between containment and a costly breach. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Mar 5, 2026 • 6min

Workday CEO Bhusri Top Priority for '26: Re-accelerate Growth

In today’s Cloud Wars Minute, I look at how Workday plans to blend AI agents with its core HR and finance platforms. Highlights 00:03 — One of the big stories of early 2026 is this whole wackiness around how AI is going to destroy the enterprise apps business, particularly SaaS companies. Will it change it? Absolutely and sometimes in profound ways, but not to the elimination of it. This idea that customers can either use agents or they can use apps is ridiculous. There's a very powerful role for both agents and applications. 01:14 — Workday's Aneel Bhusri's top priority for the company as he takes over again as CEO is he wants to grow. He came back in as CEO last month. Carl Eschenbach had been CEO for three years and did a great job building out the international business and scaling up the sales organization, making Workday a bigger, more well-run machine. 02:21 — Bhusri emphasized very strongly its [Workday's] core business of enterprise applications for HR and finance is very strong. It'll be able to help those customers find an even better way of using enterprise technology and that's the combination of its existing apps plus agents with its Data Cloud and its single data model. 03:29 — This year it's going to complement that by rolling out its own agents, specifically built around certain roles that are bound up tightly within HR organizations and finance. Bushri believes that's where AI-accelerated growth for Workday is going to happen in the second half of the year. 04:33 — Bhusri said he's a big fan of large language models, that's great. But this idea that you could take large language models, bypass applications, and connect those models to big stores of data and get great outcomes is ridiculous. This whole SaaS apocalypse thing is going to be a tremendous waste of time and energy. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Mar 4, 2026 • 4min

Microsoft Launches AI Boot Camp to Accelerate Copilot Adoption

In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I explore how Microsoft is accelerating business-process transformation with its expanding Copilot and agent ecosystem. Highlights 00:10 — Microsoft has launched a three-day online boot camp covering how to leverage its expansive toolkit for AI-powered work, beginning with a session titled “Copilots and Agents: What’s New and What’s Next?” 01:01 — Rather than listing every innovation, I want to focus on business process, where some of the most relevant near-term transformations are occurring. Copilot tuning [enhancements], expected by June 2026, will introduce new templates in the agent builder, enabling organizations to customize M365 Copilot for drafting complex documents and matching editorial styles. 01:49 — Microsoft is also introducing standalone agents, including a project manager agent for task management in Copilot Chat and a knowledge agent that operates in the background fixing links, generating summaries and FAQs, and enriching content with metadata. 02:18 — Additional agents include a personalized learning agent for micro-learning plans, a sales agent integrating CRM data into Outlook and Teams workflows, a service agent supporting customer teams, and a finance agent bringing ERP-connected data into Excel and Outlook. 03:12 — Microsoft is acutely aware that despite a massive rollout of Copilot technology, not everybody is clear on how best to incorporate it. This boot camp is a major step forward, because what can be done now with Copilot and Microsoft’s agent AI structures is truly transformational. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Mar 3, 2026 • 3min

Microsoft’s Study and Learn Agent Sets New Standard for AI in Education

In this AI Agent & Copilot Minute, Mason Siefert explores Microsoft’s first integrated learning agent for students, explaining how proactive AI modes like Understand, Practice, and Study are reshaping education beyond reactive digital tutors. Key Takeaways Proactive Learning Shift: Microsoft’s newly announced learning agent moves beyond reactive digital tutors by proactively guiding students through structured learning modes. Rather than waiting for students to ask the right questions, the agent actively leads them through concept comprehension, skill practice, and long-term study planning — marking a major evolution in AI-powered education. Three Learning Modes: The agent is built around three core modes — Understand, Practice, and Study. Understand mode delivers clear, multi-step explanations to deepen comprehension. Practice mode reinforces learning through generated questions and feedback. Study mode helps students create structured study plans, integrating material over time to strengthen retention and mastery. Empowering Educators: As AI agents take on structured guidance and reinforcement, educators gain more space to focus on mentorship, instruction, and authentic human relationships. Microsoft’s move signals a broader industry shift toward agent-based learning, setting a new standard that reactive assistants alone are no longer sufficient for modern classrooms. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Mar 3, 2026 • 6min

Salesforce Back to Growth Agenda: CRO Milano Shows How

In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I explain how AI is fueling Salesforce’s renewed push for innovation and scale. Highlights 00:01 — We've got Salesforce now reporting some very nice numbers for its fiscal Q4 ended January 31. The bigger story behind that, I think, is the company is fully recommitted to growth once again. 01:18 — What Benioff is back to now is to get the company, with the AI Revolution, into a high-growth mode again. Chief Revenue Officer Miguel Milano referred to Q4 as the greatest Q4 ever. 02:49 — Its RPO for Q4, $72 billion. The growth rate of 14% is pretty nice. That is fully contracted business in the future not yet recognized as revenue. So things definitely turned up there. 03:13 — Q4 revenue growth was 12%, better than usual, and not all of this accounted for by the Informatica acquisition. It boosted its long-range growth and said we're going to show how the AI revenue is coming in. 04:59 — At the beginning of the AI revolution, there's so much potential for customers to do things they could never do before. A fully-focused-on-customers Salesforce is going to be great for business, great for customers. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Mar 2, 2026 • 10min

AI Agent & Copilot Podcast: Alithya's Chad Weiner on Laying AI Groundwork, Driving AI Impact

Key Takeaways Laying groundwork: Weiner will be leading a session at the AI Kickstart Preconference, introducing attendees to Copilot Studio and how to build their first custom AI agent. He explains that the session will cover real-world examples and walk through agent creation, deployment, monitoring, and governance to help participants "get the groundwork to take advantage of the future days in the conference." Event takeaways: When discussing event takeaways, Weiner explains that the AI Agent & Copilot Summit will help leaders move from AI experimentation to real execution, turning curiosity into measurable business value across customer service, operations, and employee empowerment. Further, sessions will demonstrate how Microsoft 365 and Copilot Studio agents provide a low-barrier way to build secure, data-aligned AI solutions tied directly to business goals. Gaining a competitive edge: The event brings a unique take to the space as it unites both practitioners and partners to share real-world AI and Copilot use cases, helping make agents more practical, approachable, and grounded in tangible business outcomes to accelerate adoption, says Weiner. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Mar 2, 2026 • 6min

Workday CEO Bhusri: Brilliant Take on Apps/AI and Limits of Vibe-Coding

In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I break down Aneel Bushri’s powerful case for pairing AI with enterprise apps. Highlights 00:02 — There are some wild things going on in the enterprise software business, some of it rational, much of it irrational. But the big issue right now is for customers, partners, and the software vendors, the Cloud Wars Top 10, to figure out what is going to be the right way forward, the optimal mix of AI with enterprise applications. 01:47 — I think the most important thing here was his [Workday CEO Aneel Bushri] take on the interplay between apps and AI. And also, he just had an utterly classic line about vibe coding. He said there is no amount of vibe coding that will ever produce an HR or ERP system that will meet all the requirements that modern business needs. 02:25 — "Whatever your problem is, AI is the solution." That's just not true. It's a tool. It's a fabulous tool. Might be the most important tool ever, but it can't do everything. And in his opening remarks on the Workday Q4 earnings call, Aneel Bushri did a great job of breaking that down. 04:08 — He said the combination of AI and many of the things it can do with its probabilistic capabilities and insights and predictive capabilities, plus the deterministic certainty of enterprise apps, is a really nice pair. He talked about the way forward and how he sees those two dynamics playing together. 05:18 — I just think he did one of his best jobs ever yesterday to step forward and say: "Here's what's real. Here's what isn't real. Here is the way forward. Here's the best combination for things. Here's the right outcome for customers." Brilliant performance by him on this earnings call. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Feb 27, 2026 • 2min

Microsoft Adds Rubrics Refinement and Governance Tools to Strengthen Enterprise AI Agent Operations

In this AI Agent & Copilot Minute, Mason Siefert outlines how Microsoft’s latest enhancements to Copilot Studio — especially the new tools in the Power CAT Copilot Studio Kit — are designed to bring structure, governance, and measurable quality to enterprise-scale AI agents. Key Takeaways Rubrics refinement: The headline feature in the updated kit is the rubrics refinement tool, which addresses a growing challenge in agentic AI operations — how to consistently and accurately grade agent responses. The tool introduces a repeatable feedback loop where teams define evaluation rubrics, compare AI-generated grades with human evaluations, and then refine instructions when the two don’t align. The result is a more systematic, scalable way to ensure automated assessments meet human-level standards. Governance & visibility: Beyond evaluation, the kit strengthens oversight across the AI estate. A new compliance hub automatically flags configuration risks to help teams stay ahead of governance concerns. Conversation KPIs allow organizations to track agent performance without manually reviewing transcripts, and an agent inventory provides a centralized view of custom agents and the capabilities they rely on. Together, these features bring operational clarity to expanding AI environments. Looking ahead: As agentic systems scale, structured coordination between humans and AI will be critical. Tools like the rubrics refinement workflow signal a shift from experimentation to disciplined operations, where evaluation, compliance, and performance tracking are embedded into the lifecycle of every agent. Organizations that formalize these processes now will be better positioned to manage complexity and deliver trustworthy AI outcomes at scale. Visit Cloud Wars for more.
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Feb 27, 2026 • 3min

Microsoft AI CEO Predicts Human-Level Automation of White-Collar Jobs Within 18 Months

In today's Cloud Wars Minute, I explain why aligning your role with AI may be the key to thriving in the next 18 months. Highlights 00:05 — There's a lot of discussion right now about the impact of AI on the job market. Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman has weighed in on this debate regarding the pace of AI innovation and its impact on employment. 00:53 — “I think that we're going to have a human-level performance on most, if not all, professional tasks. So white-collar work, where you're sitting down at a computer, either being a lawyer or an accountant or a project manager or a marketing person — most of those tasks will be fully automated by an AI within the next 12 to 18 months.” 01:18 — "Many software engineers report that they're now using AI-assisted coding for the vast majority of their code production, which means that their role has shifted now to this meta function of debugging, scrutinizing, or doing strategic stuff like architecting, putting things into production." 01:36 — And he explains that this is a very different relationship with AI — one that's evolved a huge amount over the past six months — and things are moving fast. But you don't need to read this with doom and gloom. Focus on the second statement I read out instead. 01:52 — In that, Suleyman says roles have shifted, and that's the crux of achieving success in the AI Era — recognizing that things are changing and that, to keep up with these changes, you have to orient yourself alongside AI, to align your role to work with AI — not against it, not instead of it, but with it. Visit Cloud Wars for more.

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