Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
NYSE: DELL | $88.4B revenue FY2024; top-3 in PCs, servers, and external storage; AI server backlog nearly doubled to $2.9B; ranked #48 Fortune 500; pivoting to AI infrastructure
Dell Technologies was founded as PC's Limited in 1984 by Michael Dell from his University of Texas dorm room, built on the direct-to-consumer model that eliminated retail markup by selling custom-configured PCs directly via phone and mail order. The company rebranded to Dell Computer in 1988 and pioneered configure-to-order manufacturing that became the standard for PC industry efficiency. Dell's 2016 acquisition of EMC Corporation for $67 billion — the largest technology acquisition in history at the time — transformed the company from a PC and server vendor into a diversified enterprise technology infrastructure provider spanning storage, networking, and data protection.\n\nDell Technologies' portfolio spans client devices (XPS, Inspiron, Latitude, Precision laptops and desktops), enterprise infrastructure (PowerEdge servers, PowerStore and PowerScale storage, networking), sold through its ISG (Infrastructure Solutions Group) and CSG (Client Solutions Group) business units. PowerEdge servers are among the most widely deployed in enterprise data centers globally. GPU-accelerated servers for AI model training and inference have become a significant growth segment. Dell also distributes VMware products, though Broadcom's 2023 acquisition of VMware substantially changed that commercial relationship.\n\nDell reported FY2025 revenue of approximately $95.6 billion, with ISG growing significantly on AI server demand from hyperscalers and enterprise data center buildouts. The company trades on the NYSE under DELL. Dell's position as a key hardware enabler of the AI infrastructure cycle — supplying GPU servers to cloud providers and enterprises — has driven a re-rating of the stock as investors recognize its role in the ongoing AI capital expenditure wave.
Franco-Italian semiconductor giant; ~$13B revenue. STM32 MCU family powers 4B+ IoT/embedded devices. Strong SiC power device position for automotive and industrial markets.
STMicroelectronics was formed in 1987 through the merger of Italy's SGS Microelettronica and France's Thomson Semiconducteurs in Geneva, Switzerland. The company has built a comprehensive portfolio spanning microcontrollers (MCUs), MEMS sensors, power management ICs, silicon carbide devices, and wireless connectivity chips serving automotive, industrial, IoT, and consumer electronics markets worldwide.\n\nSTMicro is perhaps best known for its STM32 family of ARM Cortex-M microcontrollers, which power billions of embedded applications from smart home devices and wearables to industrial controllers and medical devices. The company is also a major manufacturer of MEMS inertial sensors (accelerometers, gyroscopes) found in smartphones and automotive safety systems, and has a rapidly growing SiC power device business targeting EV inverters and industrial power converters. STMicro reported revenues of approximately $13 billion in FY2024 and guided for continued mid-to-high single digit growth in 2025 across most end markets.\n\nSTMicro operates 11 main manufacturing sites across Europe and Asia, giving it significant vertical integration and a degree of supply chain resilience. The company is jointly owned by French and Italian state entities holding approximately 27.5%, reflecting its strategic national significance. ST is expanding its Catania (Sicily) SiC manufacturing campus to meet surging EV demand and is a founding partner in multiple European semiconductor ecosystem initiatives.
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