IBM (NYSE: IBM) exceeded earnings expectations and demonstrated that its AI strategy is effective. Q4 revenue reached $19.69 billion compared to the anticipated $19.21 billion—a 12.1% increase from ...
Throughout its 115-year life IBM has shown itself to be a master of reinvention. In the mid-1990s the mainframe pioneer rescued itself from collapse by shifting its focus to the booming business of IT ...
Software segment growth driving Q4 sales strength IBM's Q4 sales, profit beat LSEG-compiled estimates Growth in hybrid cloud decelerating Slowdown in hybrid cloud resulting from US government shutdown ...
IBM on Wednesday topped Wall Street fourth-quarter estimates. The technology and consulting firm expects full-year revenue growth to exceed 5% and free cash flows to increase by $1 billion. IBM's ...
IBM is executing a strategic pivot from LLM competition to AI platform and data orchestration, targeting higher-margin enterprise IT budgets. Recent acquisitions, including Confluent, are expected to ...
The American Chemical Society Fall 2025 meeting will officially kick off on Sunday, Aug. 17, in Washington, DC, with the theme “Innovations in Chemistry.” The meeting will be taking place in person at ...
WASHINGTON, Jan. 7, 2026 — The Publications Division of the American Chemical Society (ACS) is proud to announce that Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) has joined the ACS Publications portfolio.
IBM is an AI pioneer, but it's been slow to find a viable business model. The tech giant is now betting on a mix of AI consulting and software to deliver AI solutions to enterprise clients. IBM's AI ...
IBM just acquired Confluent for $11 billion. When I was at IBM, I watched enterprises struggle with the same problem over and over again. Their data was always a step behind their decisions. This ...
IBM is buying data infrastructure company Confluent for $11 billion in cash in a bid to bolster its data and automation products as ever more companies move their tech operations to the cloud and ...
There is an old saying: “Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM.” For decades, this phrase was more than a wry joke—it was a reflection of the near-mythic status of Big Blue in the world of business ...