Fuddo wrote: ↑06 Sep 2020, 13:09Tuga,
A sto ti ne daju kad lijepo pise da mozes podijeliti 10 do 20 tekstova mjesecno?
Zato sto nisam pretplacena na FT, ali sam uspjela otvoriti taj clanak tako sto sam uklonila Adblocker. Te informacije su common knowledge.
1. Visa (52-percent profit margin) 2. Microsoft (33-percent profit margin) 3. Pfizer (31-percent profit margin) 4. Intel (30-percent profit margin) 5. Facebook (~28-percent profit margin)
Microsoft saw the highest percentage of change in profits, according to the report. It also ranked at No. 2 for the most successful pre-pandemic companies behind Apple and ahead of Google and Facebook.
https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/mos ... oronavirus
Meanwhile, Amazon doubled its profit as more people ordered delivery to their homes: $5.2 billion this quarter, from $2.6 billion last year. And Apple, which had many of its stores closed for chunks of the quarter, still made $11.25 billion in profit as people bought devices to entertain themselves.
t’s worth remembering that tech companies — including ones that didn’t report earnings today, such as Microsoft, which is also having a profitable pandemic — responded quickly to COVID-19 by closing offices and stores. Google said Monday it doesn’t expect its workers back in the office until July 2021 at the earliest; Facebook said in May it expected to have a larger remote staff as a permanent feature. Most Apple employees will work from home until 2021, CEO Tim Cook told Bloomberg.
If other workplaces follow this trend, Big Tech is composed of precisely the companies that stand to benefit from remote work. Amazon, for instance, was buoyed by the video chat client Zoom, since its cloud services division AWS hosts a chunk of Zoom. AWS even earned a shout-out in the Zoom earnings call! Because of the rapid uptick in Zoom use during the pandemic, the company couldn’t scale its own data centers quickly enough. Zoom CEO Eric Yuan thanked AWS in his prepared remarks for “provisioning the majority of the new servers we needed, sometimes adding several thousands a day for several days in a row.”
https://www.theverge.com/2020/7/30/2134 ... ple-amazon