A lack of quality tools is stifling wireless developers, according to a new study released by Evans Data.
Oracle recently introduced new software that it says will help organizations integrate and interact with information extracted from enterprise business applications and pull it into service-oriented architecture-based enterprise portals.
The next-gen SQL Server is Microsoft’s most feature-rich database offering to date, boasting almost completely retooled business intelligence innards, including a revamped ETL capability (the new SQL Server Integration Services, or SSIS), enhanced OLAP and data mining capabilities, and a version 2.0 release of Microsoft Reporting Services.
Historically, content management represented a safe market for small and medium software suppliers. “The ongoing joke in the content management industry was that it consisted of Documentum and the Seven Dwarfs,” says Richard Medina, principal consultant at market research firm Doculabs.
Attacks on instant messaging systems used by enterprises and consumers are escalating dramatically, according to the third-quarter report from The IMlogic Threat Center, a consortium that provides threat detection and protection for IM and peer-to-peer (P2P) apps.
Flashline recently introduced a new platform that it says manages and governs the entire chain of relationships—from corporate objectives to business services, applications, Web services and components.
IBM Global Services recently brought two new partners into its SOA Management Practice and added to its governance and Web services management capabilities.
Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA and other regulatory requirements are causing massive headaches for companies. But these headaches may get worse—and expensive—if companies’ departments don’t start working together.
The Sammons Financial Group wanted a handle on the information on its network to satisfy compliance, security and privacy requirements.
SOA enthusiasts have been trumpeting a coming generation of composite applications—applications that are composed of multiple, independent, plug-and-play services.
On Tuesday, JBoss and Microsoft announced plans to enhance the interoperability between JBoss Enterprise Middleware System (JEMS) and Microsoft Windows Server products and to increase JBoss support for the Windows Server operating system.
Fair Isaac this week acquired RulesPower to complement Fair Isaac’s Blaze Advisor rules management system.
World-class IT organizations spend 10 percent more than other companies, and have fully loaded IT wage rates that are 32 percent higher than their peers, according to 2005 Book of Numbers research from The Hackett Group, a business process advisory firm.
Looking to learn Java? Try Learning Java Through Applications, a new book by Duane J. Jarc, professor of computer of science at the University of Maryland-University College. Learning Java Through Applications’ unique approach “emphasizes Java’s graphical capabilities and the ability to create graphical user interfaces,” according to its publisher.
Versant has enhanced Java support, including an Enterprise JavaBeans 3.0 application programming interface, in the new version of its object database.
JBoss recently released a beta version of its development software designed to simplify writing complex Web applications in Java.
Iron Mountain, which provides records management and data protection services, is advising its off-site data protection customers to encrypt their backup tapes.
This week’s new buzz phrase is master data management, apparently a hot topic for the world’s largest companies, according to Kalido.
From a competitive perspective, the Series 8 business intelligence suite Cognos announced last week was not necessarily earth-shattering. After all, one of its biggest selling points is integration: it’s the first Cognos release based on the company’s ReportNet architecture; it boasts a unified user interface; and it delivers what Cognos says is seamless integration between and among its BI functions.
irtualization has gained a lot of mainstream industry traction recently, thanks in part to the success of companies such as VMWare, which nearly single-handedly revived interest in technologies that provide a logical rather than a physical view of computing resources.