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Microsoft United States Apple

Microsoft Dethrones Apple as the Largest US Company 52

The stock market has a new, but familiar, monarch. Microsoft's AI-powered stock rally has made the software giant the largest U.S. company by market value, surpassing Apple for the first time since November 2021. WSJ: Shares edged higher Thursday morning, bringing Microsoft's market value to nearly $2.87 trillion. Apple, meanwhile, fell 1%, pulling its market capitalization just below that threshold. Either Apple or Microsoft has held the title since Feb. 4, 2019, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Microsoft's stock has been on the rise for the past year thanks to the continued growth of its cloud computing division, even as major competitors like Amazon and Google have experienced a gradual slowdown in sales growth.
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Microsoft Dethrones Apple as the Largest US Company

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  • I mean, ok, if you are a window operation, then sure, Azure will fit you.

    But if you are like most serious operations out there, you're generally using Linux, and probably Oracle or the like for a RDB....

    And unless something has drastically changed, Azure is not exactly "friendly" to those systems.

    We had nightmares setting things up at Azure, etc.

    The only reasons one of my last large, LARGE systems moved there was, that a manger that "knew windows" better than he knew Linux...felt more comfortable moving

    • Big Azure spenders in 2020 (couldn't find newer data in my 30 second search)

      1) Verizon: $79.9 million
      2) MSI Computer: $78 million
      3) LG Electronics: $76.7 million
      4) CenturyLink: $61.9 million
      5) NTT America: $48.7 million
      6) Wikimedia Foundation: $42.6 million
      7) LinkedIn Corp: $41.2 million
      8) News Corp: $40.5 million
      9) Adobe: $39.9 million
      10) Intel: $38.5 million

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      ALL the cloud systems are constantly-changing convoluted cluster-fucks. Azure just has its own style of suckage.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @12:36PM (#64150015)

      I mean, ok, if you are a window operation, then sure, Azure will fit you.

      So ... you just described most of the Fortune 500 list. We know *you* hate Microsoft, but the reality is the answer to your question is: "Everyone else"

      But if you are like most serious operations out there

      I'll take a no true Scotsman fallacy with a side of stupid ignorance thanks.

      you're generally using Linux, and probably Oracle or the like for a RDB....

      Indeed you are. But what makes you think the result isn't running on Azure? You do realise you can provision Azure with Linux right? Linux accounts for half of Microsoft's Azure revenue.

    • Azure certainly has made steady gains in market share:

      https://regmedia.co.uk/2023/02... [regmedia.co.uk]

      I don't know the reasons but that's the bottom line.

    • I am being kind of forced to train in AWS and I do not like it compared to Azure. It is expensive and overly complex while Azure is gaining AI and will soon be integrated with ChatGPT and CoPilot. Azure is ahead in many areas compared to AWS and it integrates well with the Microsoft Ecosystem.

    • Me.

      For $30 a month, I am able to leverage a SQL Server, license included, and use it to back my DNA web site ($10 a month) with 400 users. It would be free, except that I need to much storage for the free tier. I don't have to install anything, upgrades are done for me automatically. I get geo-redundant storage and continuous backup.

      I'm actually a very happy customer.

  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @11:59AM (#64149885)
    With Microsoft stock value surpassing Apple, it would make MS the most valuable company. "Largest" is more ambiguous as it could mean many things like most number of employees (Walmart) or most locations (McDonald's).
    • I guess I'm old now but I'm still not really used to tech companies being the most valuable companies.

      In 1995 the top 6 were:

      GE
      Exxon
      AT&T
      Coca-Cola
      Walmart
      Philip-Morris (cigarettes)

      So, ok, you had AT&T.

      https://americanbusinesshistor... [americanbu...istory.org]

      I'm always surprised automakers aren't higher on the list, since cars consume a big part of the family budget. Competitive business apparently.

      Here's a fun article on how much things have changed in the ranks of the highest-valued companies globally since

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @12:10PM (#64149931)

    How. The. Fuck. I hate to go full misanthrope, but man .. people are fucking stupid.

    • Azure is the best cloud platform. I know I am going to get flamed but AWS is very expensive and has too many products that are thinly functional and lock you in more than any com/win32 garbarge I have seen 20 years ago. I am not saying Azure is perfect or doesn't offer lock in.

      It is much easier to get started in Azure and Microsoft is adding AI with ChatGPT and CoPilot and is ahead over AWS in this area as well as existing integrations.

      I am not much of an AWS expert but I am being trained at work and I do n

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        Azure is the best cloud platform.

        I don't agree but I digress, this is really like saying "Syphilis, the best of the venereal diseases".

    • by lsllll ( 830002 )
      The market value of a company has nothing to do with the shitiness of their product and all to do with investors' speculation as to the money the company can bring in. We all know Azure is not great, and heaven knows I'm a Linux guy who's hated MS for the long run, but Azure seems to be working for many companies and Microsoft has indeed integrated as many things as it can so that it can try and sell you their products as a whole. That's more than can be said of any company of the same size.
      • by Junta ( 36770 )

        Not only the market valuation, but the revenue strangely also doesn't correlate well with how shitty or not a product is when it comes to the "business technology" market. A huge chunk of that are decision makers throwing buzzwords and money back and forth without ever actually knowing anything about how the actual work is done or even asking for/listening to a technical evaluation by their team that would actually be able to.

        The hands on folks are just saddled with making the best of whatever the golf bu

  • Ironic (Score:2, Interesting)

    by 0xG ( 712423 )

    I remember when Apple was on the ropes (pre-iphone),
    and survived only because of a large cash infusion from
    Microsoft...

    • Re:Ironic (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Thursday January 11, 2024 @12:33PM (#64149995)

      Yep. That made MS look better at their antitrust trial and Apple was in seriously bad shape. They were months away from bankruptcy. Say what you want about Steve Jobs but he worked a miracle to get them turn around.

      • by HBI ( 10338492 )

        Apple had earned that bankruptcy. I had the misfortune of working for a company that installed Macs at a couple hundred locations. Managing them under Sculley and his successors was horrifying. Jobs made it plausible again.

    • You mean pre iPod? They had a device in everyone's pocket with iconic white ear buds before the iPhone.
    • by hawk ( 1151 )

      That "infusion", though, was in settlement of an intellectual property suit.

  • rounded the corners of on the accounts.
  • So what non-US companies are bigger than those 2?

    • None. The most valuable non-US company was Saudi Aramco with a cap of $2.1T as of June 2023. With TSMC at $542B after them. But check what they are worth today.
  • Long Live The King!
  • the Apple had fallen far from the tree of Jobs long ago

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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