1/9/2024 0 Comments Amazon color oracleWhile IBM heads the list of also-rans (growing to 1.4% of the market), no one else lands above 1%. SEE: Cloud computing policy template (Tech Pro Research) Google, often considered the third member of the public cloud apocalypse, is actually fourth, with Alibaba jumping to 3% of the market in 2016.Īnd everyone else? Either in retreat (Rackspace) or a rounding error: Microsoft, in second place, grew faster (61.1%) to finish 2016 with 7.1% of the market. AWS increased its share of the market between 20 from 39.7-44.1%, growing IaaS revenue by 45.9%. The cloudy rich keep getting richer in IaaS land, with AWS the richest of them all. Of the legacy tech vendors, only Microsoft seems to be putting up strong growth and market share numbers across IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS. Indeed, while Oracle chairman Larry Ellison may bluster that Oracle is “completely transforming the way all companies buy and use cloud by providing flexibility and choice,” the reality is that Oracle is hardly transforming the way any companies buy and use cloud. Perhaps less surprising, however, is that Oracle couldn’t manage to crack the top-10 largest IaaS vendors (though it earned a more respectable 7th place and 2% market share in PaaS, with an even more robust 4th place in SaaS and 5.6% market share). Given how much traction Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud seem to have made over the last year, this continued dominance is a bit surprising. With over 44% of the all-important IaaS market, AWS owns more than double the market share of its next nine largest competitors combined. In the world of cloud, Amazon Web Services (AWS) continues to dominate, according to Gartner’s recently released report, Market Share: Public Cloud Services, Worldwide, 2016.
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