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Microsoft to lay off 3% of workforce, CNBC reports

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
MIcrosoft Layoffs SemiWiki.jpg


May 13 (Reuters) - Microsoft is laying off 3% of its workforce, or roughly 7,000 employees, CNBC reported on Tuesday, as the technology giant looks to rein in costs while funneling billions of dollars into its ambitious bet on artificial intelligence.

The cuts will be across all levels and geographies, and are likely the largest since Microsoft laid off 10,000 employees in 2023, according to the report, which cited a company statement.

The company let a small number of employees go in January over performance-related issues, but the latest cuts are not related to that and are focused on trimming management layers, the report said.

Microsoft did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. The company's stock was slightly lower in morning trading.

As artificial intelligence emerges as a major growth engine, Big Tech has been pouring money into the space while slashing costs elsewhere to safeguard profit margins.
Rival Google has also laid off hundreds of employees in the past year, as it looks to control costs and prioritize AI, media reports have said.

Microsoft's reported move comes weeks after the company posted stronger-than-expected growth in its cloud-computing business Azure and blowout results in the latest quarter, calming investor worries in an uncertain economy.

The company had a total of 228,000 workers, with 126,000 employees in the United States at the end of June last year, according to its annual filing with the U.S. SEC.

 
I'm wondering when AI will start replacing people at Microsoft? Writing code seems like a perfect fit for AI and these AI giants should be using it internally if they expect others to do so as well.
 
I'm wondering when AI will start replacing people at Microsoft? Writing code seems like a perfect fit for AI and these AI giants should be using it internally if they expect others to do so as well.

Microsoft do a lot more than write code.

Got friends on the infrastructe side and they are cutting back on staff in SEA with respect to Data Centre constructions so likely that side of Microsoft gonna feel the axe the most , dont need so many Civil Engineers if not building anything
 
I'm wondering when AI will start replacing people at Microsoft? Writing code seems like a perfect fit for AI and these AI giants should be using it internally if they expect others to do so as well.
AI can currently write what I would call simplistic code, but for OS use, complex applications, networking, HPC, storage subsystems, etc, I'm not impressed yet. Either is anyone I've talked to who I consider to be an expert software engineer. And then there's being expert enough to know when the generated code is incorrect. I've talked to someone who used AI for test creation and automation, but so far AI looks like an assistant to human software engineers, not a replacement. I don't know when a transition to "coding autonomy" arrives, but for the software that fascinates me, not soon, IMHO.

I'm not familiar with how good AI is at circuit design. Does anyone here have any experience with the tools available. like Cirkit Desgner?
 
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