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Earl says England inspired by last year's Calcutta Cup
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USA romp past Dutch in T20 World Cup to keep Super Eight hopes alive
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De Minaur scraps past local legend van de Zandschulp
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Ukrainian Heraskevych loses appeal against Olympics disqualification
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Ghana rallies round traditional tunic after foreign mockery
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Forest set to hire former Wolves boss Pereira: reports
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England rugby captain Itoje slams Ratcliffe's 'ridiculous' immigration comments
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Europe should speak to Russia with 'one voice', Putin foe says
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US Congress impasse over immigration set to trigger partial shutdown
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US to deploy new aircraft carrier to Middle East as Trump warns Iran
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Ubisoft targets new decade of 'Rainbow 6' with China expansion
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Stocks trend lower as AI disruption worries move to fore
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Spurs set to hire Tudor as interim boss until end of season: reports
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International crew en route to space station
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Man City's Rodri charged over ref rant
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Italian biathlete Passler cleared to compete at Olympics despite positive test
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Macron slams 'antisemitic hydra' as he honours 2006 Jewish murder victim
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Tuipulotu warns England to beware 'desperate' Scotland in Six Nations
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Cash-starved French hospitals ask public to pitch in
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US consumer inflation eases more than expected to lowest since May
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Germany's Merz urges US to repair ties with Europe
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Europe seeks new 'partnership' with US at security gathering
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Fresh water leak adds to Louvre museum woes
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Floods wreak havoc in Morocco farmlands after severe drought
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Russia, Ukraine to hold talks in Geneva on February 17-18
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Ukraine's Heraskevych hopes 'truth will prevail' in Olympics appeal
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Dumplings and work stress as Chinese rush home for Lunar New Year
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Macron denounces 'antisemitic hydra' as he honours 2006 Jewish murder victim
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India-Pakistan: Hottest ticket in cricket sparks T20 World Cup fever
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Cross-country king Klaebo equals Winter Olympics record with eighth gold
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Ukraine's Heraskevych appeals to CAS over Olympic ban as Malinin eyes second gold
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Stocks mostly drop after Wall Street slide
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Sophie Adenot, the second French woman to fly to space
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Alleged rape victim of Norway princess's son says she took sleeping pills
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Activist group Palestine Action wins legal challenge against UK ban
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Driven by Dhoni, Pakistan's X-factor tweaker Tariq targets India
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Davidson set to make history as Ireland seek to rebound against Italy
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Europe defends NATO, US ties at security gathering
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China's fireworks heartland faces fizzling Lunar New Year sales
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Bangladesh's Yunus 'banker to the poor', pushing democratic reform
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Cracknell given Six Nations debut as Wales make changes for France
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L'Oreal shares sink as sales miss forecasts
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Bangladesh nationalists celebrate landslide win, Islamists cry foul
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Thai PM agrees coalition with Thaksin-backed party
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Zimbabwe pull off shock win over Australia at T20 World Cup
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Merz, Macron to address first day of Munich security meet
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Three dead, many without power after storm lashes France and Spain
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Bennett half-century as Zimbabwe make 169-2 against Australia
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Asian stocks track Wall St down as traders rethink tech bets
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'Weak by design' African Union gathers for summit
Computer pioneer Microsoft turns 50 in the age of AI
Microsoft has been at the heart of computing for half a century, becoming a tech stalwart almost taken for granted as lifestyles embraced the internet.
As the company, founded with a vision of putting computers in every home and office, celebrates its 50th anniversary on Friday, it is looking to boost its fortunes by being a leader in the fast-developing field of artificial intelligence (AI).
"From a storytelling standpoint, they've been a boring company and a boring stock," eMarketer analyst Jeremy Goldman said of the Richmond, Washington-based behemoth.
"It's funny because they have a $2.9 trillion market cap, and that is huge," he continued, referring to Microsoft's value based on its share price.
The only company with a higher market cap is iPhone maker Apple.
Cloud computing is fueling Microsoft's revenue with the help of its ubiquitous Office software, now hosted online and no longer released in boxes of floppy disks or CDs.
"It's not a very sexy infrastructure, but it's a very valuable one," Goldman said of Microsoft's data centers and software at the foundation of its cloud-computing platform.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google are Microsoft's cloud-computing rivals.
- 'Micro-Soft' -
Clouds were the stuff of weather forecasts rather than computing when Bill Gates and childhood friend Paul Allen founded what was first called "Micro-Soft" in 1975.
They launched the MS-DOS operating system that became known as "Windows" and went on to run most of the world's computers.
Microsoft Office programs including Word, Excel and PowerPoint became standard business tools, even fending off free Google Docs software.
"Microsoft had a lot of businesses that were weaker and challenged -- the perfect example is Office," Goldman said.
"That Office is still such a meaningful business for them says something about the way they were able to innovate."
Current chief executive Satya Nadella championed a Microsoft shift to making its software available on just about any device as subscription services hosted in the cloud.
The move likely saved Microsoft from seeing free services like Google Docs reduce their market share to zero, the analyst said.
- 'Achilles heel' -
Microsoft remains in the shadow of other US tech giants when it comes to offerings such as social networks, smartphones and the AI-infused digital assistants that have become woven into people's lives, but it is not for lack of effort.
Microsoft introduced Xbox video game consoles in 2001, steadily building up its stable of studios, making the blockbuster buy of Activision Blizzard two years ago and adding an online subscription service for players.
And despite its launch of the Bing search engine in 2009, Google still dominates that market.
Microsoft in 2016 bought career-focused social network LinkedIn, which has seen steady growth. But it still lacks the reach of Meta's Facebook or Instagram, or the influence of Elon Musk's X (formerly Twitter).
Microsoft is among those in the running to buy TikTok, which faces a ban in the United States if not sold by China-based ByteDance.
While Apple and Google have excelled at making it easy or even fun for users to engage with products, that has been an "Achilles heel" for Microsoft, according to Goldman.
"It's never been a strong suit of theirs," the analyst said.
- Mobile miss -
Known for a focus on sales rather than innovation, Steve Ballmer, who followed Gates as chief of Microsoft from 2000 to 2013, has been faulted for missing the shift to smartphones and other mobile computing devices.
His successor, Nadella, took over with a vow to make Microsoft a "mobile-first, cloud-first" company and Microsoft has since invested heavily in AI, taking a stake in ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and building the technology into offerings including Bing, though to little avail.
- Behind in AI? -
Independent analyst Jack Gold believes that despite those investments and efforts, Microsoft lags in AI because it lacks its own chips or foundation model.
"They are not as advanced in that as AWS and Google, so they're still playing a little bit of catchup in that space," Gold said of Microsoft.
Google Cloud's revenue growth is on pace to overtake Microsoft's Azure for second place in the market in two years, the analyst said.
P.Costa--AMWN