Systems integrators (SIs) have been integral to IT projects for decades, providing consulting services and helping enterprises build and launch technology tools.
Now, as organizations move to deploy agentic AI, top large language model (LLM) providers are looking to get in on that action. A proliferation of Forward Deployed Engineer (FDE) services embeds AI experts directly into customer teams to help create, customize, and launch AI services.
For instance, this week, Microsoft launched a $2.5 billion venture, Microsoft Frontier Company, that the tech giant says “goes beyond” FDE, and Amazon Web Services (AWS) announced its own $1 billion investment into a new AWS FDE platform.
Both projects will integrate thousands of Microsoft and AWS engineers into customer environments to help them not only build AI tools, but learn essential skills to handle projects on their own going forward. Other big model players, including Anthropic, are also getting into the game with their own FDE services
Nadella's vision emphasizes building proprietary AI systems to ensure sustainable competitive advantage, avoiding reliance on dominant models.
The post Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella outlines AI’s future in proprietary learning loops appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Microsoft has unveiled the Microsoft Frontier Company, a new operating business focused on delivering “frontier transformation” through AI for Microsoft’s customers around the world. Microsoft Frontier Company launches with a $2.5 billion investment from Microsoft and 6,000 industry and engineering experts who will be embedded with customers to co-design, co-innovate, deploy, and continuously improve their AI systems, Judson Althoff, CEO of Microsoft Commercial Business, said in a July 2 blog post announcing the new company.
Microsoft Frontier Company will provide a unique combination of skills that include deep industry knowledge, change management and continuous improvement experience, and enterprise-grade AI engineering expertise, Althoff said. Companies as part of the effort are being encouraged to establish an intelligence platform so their “unique IQ” — their proprietary data, expertise, workflows, and decision-making processes — compounds over time from within, using their choic
Visual Studio Code 1.127, an update to Microsoft’s popular kinda-sorta open-source code editor, brings improvements to the Agents window for managing agent sessions and makes the browser tools for agents generally available. Browser tools for agents was previously a preview feature.
Released July 1, VS Code 1.127 can be downloaded for Windows, Linux, and Mac from code.visualstudio.com.
This release of VS Code features agents that can build and test web apps in the integrated browser, safer per-site browsing with per-site permissions, and new ways to keep agent sessions organized. Browser tools for agents, which let agents open pages in the integrated browser, read content and console errors, take screenshots, and select, type, and navigate to verify its own work, become generally available with this release. The browser tools are now enabled by default.
Per-site browser permissions in the integrated browser allow pages to use more web APIs including geolocation, camera, microphone, a
Investor concerns over Microsoft's AI lag highlight the broader risk of traditional software firms losing ground in an AI-driven market.
The post Microsoft faces investor concerns over Copilot’s technological lag appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Amazon's satellite internet launch could reshape global connectivity, challenging existing players and impacting the satellite industry dynamics.
The post Amazon to launch initial Leo internet service this year as satellite network nears 400 appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Microsoft is expected to announce a new round of layoffs next week, with several thousand jobs at stake, according to Business Insider. Among others, the company’s sales, consulting, and Xbox divisions will be affected.
The cuts are reported to affect less than 2.5% of Microsoft’s approximately 220,000 employees worldwide, meaning the layoffs will be less extensive than last year’s workforce reductions.
In 2025, Microsoft laid off approximately 15,000 employees in two rounds: 6,000 workers in May, followed by another 9,000 in July.
The company is reportedly rolling out the cost-cutting measures while continuing to boost investments in AI. Microsoft has faced increased pressure from investors regarding how AI will affect the company’s future business model and cost structure.
Earlier this year, the company for the first time in its history offered voluntary retirement buyouts to roughly 8,750 employees, or about 7% of its workforce.
Microsoft's strategic shift to prioritize impactful AI features over widespread integration may redefine industry standards for AI utility.
The post Microsoft’s Jacob Andreou is killing off low-value Copilot features, and the AI market should take notes appeared first on Crypto Briefing.