News

Microsoft will lay off thousands of workers in the second round of job cuts in recent months. The layoffs, first reported by The Seattle Times, will lead to a less than 4% reduction in Microsoft ...
Microsoft is planning another round of Xbox job cuts as part of company-wide reorganization, marking the fourth downsizing of its gaming division in 18 months.
Microsoft is cutting roughly 3% of its global workforce as the company shifts more resources toward the race to develop advanced artificial intelligence, the company confirmed on Tuesday.
In May, the company had announced layoffs affecting around 6,000 workers. Microsoft, led by CEO Satya Nadella, announced last week it would lay off nearly 4% of its workforce. AFP via Getty Images ...
Microsoft had 228,000 employees worldwide at the end of June, meaning that the move will affect thousands of employees. It’s likely Microsoft’s largest round of layoffs since the elimination ...
Microsoft’s artificial intelligence (AI) business is set to hit an annual run rate for subscription renewals of $10bn. For the quarter that ended September 30, the company reported revenue of ...
In its Q2 2025 earnings, Microsoft announced revenue of $69.6 billion for the quarter and net income of $24.1 billion. CEO Satya Nadella says its AI business was up 175 percent year over year.
Business Tech News #5 – Talkdesk launches AI platform to streamline utilities support Talkdesk has launched the Utilities Experience Cloud, an AI-driven platform designed to enhance customer ...
Microsoft generated $245.12 billion in revenue in 2024, while Apple generated 391.04 billion. Microsoft earned $88.14 billion in net income to Apple's $93.74 billion.
Microsoft has begun laying off nearly 3 percent of its total workforce — or about 6,000 employees — its second round of cuts this year.
SymphonyAI, 2024 Microsoft Partner of the Year for Business Transformation – AI Innovation, is a SAIGroup company, backed by a $1 billion commitment from successful entrepreneur and ...
According to Business Insider, Copilot, which Microsoft claims is being used by nearly 70% of Fortune 500 companies, is proving to be inefficient, costly, and insecure for many organizations.