https://www.zdnet.com/article/micros...sition-report/
And,
https://www.zdnet.com/article/in-201...-nobody-cared/
BI claims that the two have discussed the possibility of an acquisition on an on-and-off-again basis over the years "but in the last few weeks talks have grown more serious." BI is citing unnamed "people close to the companies" as its sources.
If Microsoft were to bid on GitHub, the move wouldn't be as odd as it might have just a couple years ago. Since Satya Nadella became CEO in 2014, Microsoft has been stepping up its open-source presence.
Microsoft and GitHub already have an ongoing partnership with GitHub, just announcing a month ago the release of Microsoft's new App Center App in the GitHub marketplace.
At its Build 2018 developer conference in early May, Microsoft officials again touted that Microsoft is now the number one contributor to GitHub, a status it first achieved in 2016.
In 2017, Microsoft had about 1,300 employees actively pushing code to 825 top repositories on GitHub, officials said, compared to Google with 900 employees contributing to about 1,100 repositories, and Amazon with 134 employees pushing code to 158 top projects. Last year, Microsoft surprisingly moved to the Git version-control system for Windows development.
Earlier this year, GitHub officials noted that machine learning/deep learning projects were among the fastest growing for its site. Microsoft is all-in on AI. And to top it all off, Microsoft has been keen to continue to expand its presence in the San Francisco/Silicon Valley area.
If Microsoft were to bid on GitHub, the move wouldn't be as odd as it might have just a couple years ago. Since Satya Nadella became CEO in 2014, Microsoft has been stepping up its open-source presence.
Microsoft and GitHub already have an ongoing partnership with GitHub, just announcing a month ago the release of Microsoft's new App Center App in the GitHub marketplace.
At its Build 2018 developer conference in early May, Microsoft officials again touted that Microsoft is now the number one contributor to GitHub, a status it first achieved in 2016.
In 2017, Microsoft had about 1,300 employees actively pushing code to 825 top repositories on GitHub, officials said, compared to Google with 900 employees contributing to about 1,100 repositories, and Amazon with 134 employees pushing code to 158 top projects. Last year, Microsoft surprisingly moved to the Git version-control system for Windows development.
Earlier this year, GitHub officials noted that machine learning/deep learning projects were among the fastest growing for its site. Microsoft is all-in on AI. And to top it all off, Microsoft has been keen to continue to expand its presence in the San Francisco/Silicon Valley area.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/in-201...-nobody-cared/
While Microsoft's desktop operating system continues to be a key fixture of enterprise computing environments, it faces extinction at home. And Redmond seems perfectly fine with that.
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