Application Development Trends' News


IPLocks Lays Down the Seven Laws of Risk Management

In 2002, when IPLocks was founded, the enterprise database security conversation was all about perimeters and encryption, and the company’s products reflected that focus. But the conversation has taken a turn in recent years. Organizations are concerned about internal intrusions, the misuse of sensitive information by trading partners and sustaining regulatory compliance. IPLocks has responded to that shift with a broader approach, says CTO Adrian Lane, which it calls information risk management.

Macromedia BREWing Flash for Mobile Apps

Macromedia's recently announced agreement with wireless telecommunications company Qualcomm to develop and distribute Flash Lite applications and multimedia content to BREW-enabled mobile handsets and mobile operators in the U.S. may be the mass-market mobile opening for technology Macromedia has been searching for, says Ovum analyst Tony Cripps.

Tibco, Defywire Strike BMP Partnership

Tibco Software and Defywire announced a new partnership to offer Tibco customers real-time access to business processes via wireless devices, using Defywire’s mobile Java-based software.

BEA’s New "Liquid" Service Infrastructure Strategy

BEA Systems has unveiled a new line of products for the emerging service infrastructure market, and launched a rebranding campaign to freshen its image.

Virtual Machines: The New Container for Software Distribution

Is virtualization technology changing the software distribution paradigm for developers? VMware thinks so. As evidence, the company points to its newly launched VMware Technology Network Web site, where some of the industry's biggest ISVs are making their software available prepackaged in virtual machines.

BI Tool Keeps Independence Air Competitive

In the fiercely competitive travel industry, where airlines must do all they can to stay afloat, one airline has found a way to turn data into dollars. Independence Air captures more than one gigabyte of operational data per day on such things as flight loads, geographical market, price points, booking curves, seasonality, time of day, timeliness, lost baggage and revenue accounting.

EnterpriseDB Commercializes Open-Source PostgreSQL

There's a new player in the open-source database game. Startup EnterpriseDB emerged from stealth mode last month to launch the first public beta of its flagship product, a PostgreSQL-based database management system: EnterpriseDB 2005.

Gartner Advises IT to Focus on Five Areas

If you’re wondering what your organization should invest in, Gartner’s ideas may help you decide. Gartner is encouraging IT firms to make room in their programs and budgets for five key topic areas this year: open-source software, voice/data convergence, service-oriented architecture, IT utility and global sourcing.

Oracle Gets a New Toad from Quest

Quest Software recently introduced its latest version of Toad for Oracle, used to manage database objects, create and debug PL/SQL, and create, execute and optimize SQL queries. The database tool is aimed at Oracle Real Application Clusters, Citrix and terminal server environments.

Microsoft Sets Launch Date for Three Key Products

SQL Server 2005, Visual Studio 2005 and BizTalk Server 2006 will be formally launched during the week of Nov. 7, according to Paul Flessner, senior vice president of Server Applications at Microsoft at this week’s Microsoft TechEd 2005

RSA Provides Policy-Based Approach to App Security

Why do so many application development organizations push security to the back of the bus? One reason, says Gartner analyst Ray Wagner, is that security requires a level of expertise most developers don't have.

Borland Unveils JBuilder Roadmap; Signposts Include Eclipse

Borland Software recently laid out plans for JBuilder, including continued development of JBuilder products to utilize Eclipse as the integration framework.

Metrowerks Updates CodeTEST for Expanding Symbian Market

Developers of mobile applications for Symbian-based devices will soon have another tool to help them meet growing demands. Freescale Semiconductor’s Metrowerks group announced plans to release a new version of its CodeTEST analysis tool for Symbian.

App Servers’ Performance Play Key Role in SOA

Interest is reaching an all-time high for service-oriented architecture, and application and integration servers will play a pivotal role in SOAs, according to a recent study by The Yankee Group.

ASG Fires Starter Gun for SOA

Enterprises vying to take advantage of the capabilities in service-oriented architecture now have another product to choose from—Allen Systems Group recently released its SOA starter kit.

HP Takes Aim at SOA via OpenView

In an effort to help enterprises comply with government regulations and join the service-oriented architecture drive, Hewlett-Packard introduced new software to its OpenView line, targeting these areas.

Eclipse Brings Open Source to Business Intelligence Market

The Eclipse Foundation says the Business Intelligence and Reporting Tools (BIRT) project version 1.0 is now generally available.

JBoss Launches Certification Program for Its Partners

JBoss has introduced a program for its partners that it says will help them handle demand for JBoss Enterprise Middleware System (JEMS) in mission critical deployments. Certified partners will provide third-party technologies, integration, migration and services to support JBoss products.

Mainsoft, Mono Help with Crossover Development

It’s no secret that developers dabble in open source even if their primary development environment is Microsoft’s .NET. According to a study by Evans Data, one in five developers whose primary IDE is Visual Studio .NET has also written at least one Linux application. The study also indicates that more than half the .NET developers surveyed used open-source components in their application development.

Unencrypted Backups Can Be Worse than Worthless

When Iron Mountain lost 40 backup tapes containing personal information about 600,000 current and former employees of Time Warner earlier this year, it grabbed headlines, but it wasn't such big news. The Time Warner incident came just weeks after Bank of America reported losing backup tapes containing financial information about more than 1.2 million federal employees, including 60 U.S. senators. And a month before that, Ameritrade acknowledged losing backup tapes containing information about 200,000 clients.