jProductivity has released Protection! v. 2.0, a licensing framework for Java that ensures users will adhere to the terms of their application licensing agreements, according to the company.
Keynote Systems released yesterday the latest version of its WebIntegrity service, which scans areas of a Web site not previously accessible through software solutions, according to the company.
On Monday, WebEx set out after the $6-billion-in-2005 worldwide system management software business with a new on-demand solution.
Last week, Actuate made its second BI performance management-related move in 12 months, nabbing performancesoft, a provider of corporate performance management products and services, in an all-cash transaction valued at $16.5 million.
Many companies using Linux for embedded applications may be unwittingly violating the Linux license and even breaking federal securities laws.
This year could bring relief for mainframe organizations struggling to justify the cost of running native COBOL or Assembly applications in the IBM z/OS.
Startup Centeris is launching Likewise Management Suite 1.0, a Windows-based Linux manager designed to allow users to manage Linux servers in Windows environments.
About 3 in 5 enterprise developers expect to increase their reliance on SANs and clustering in the next 2 years, according to Evans Data's recent enterprise development survey.
TRUSTe said this week it has chosen AppLabs Technologies to test the technical operation of software applicants to its Trusted Download beta program launching early this year.
A study by Osterman Research captures key email management challenges facing enterprises in 2006.
The Object Management Group today announced the program for its Service Oriented Architecture, Model Driven Architecture and Web Services Workshop: Integrating the Enterprise and Beyond.
Complementing today's introduction of the Oracle SOA Suite, Oracle launched a series of hands-on workshops designed to provide independent software vendors with tools and skills to help their customers build, deploy and leverage SOAs.
Oracle today announced availability of the Oracle SOA Suite, a standards-based set of middleware products used to build, deploy and manage service-oriented architectures.
The world's largest companies can save up to $53 billion in IT spending over the next 5 years by implementing service-oriented architectures, according to a new benchmark report from AberdeenGroup.
Companies are racing to patch a WMF vulnerability in all versions of Microsoft Windows XP and Windows Server 2003.
Storage remains the red-headed stepchild of SOA, often because storage is regarded only as a peripheral device connected to an application-hosting platform.
Is it Dostoevsky or Dostoyevsky? Tolstoy or Tolstoi? In today's regulatory climate, such distinctions have become a chief concern of IT organizations.
IBM's mainframe unit finished with a strong Q4, a new release of its z/OS and more publicity of its zSeries Academic Initiative, a program to promote Big Iron to the Generation Y set. Why, then, are so many mainframe pros pessimistic about Big Iron's future?
Now that IBM, Microsoft and Oracle have built (or are in the process of building) robust ETL facilities into their flagship relational databases, the commoditization of ETL is all but certain. At least it would seem so.
The best capacity planning/performance management software can help IT leaders identify as much as 50 percent of the IT resources sitting idle in their data centers.