Some people at Microsoft are experimenting with letting the outside world
see more of the development process. Could there be such a thing as too much
transparency out of Redmond?
Although development around XML and Web services continues to be primarily a software story, hardware, specifically the XML router, has a key role to play, according to Girish Juneja, co-founder of Sarvega Inc., Chicago.
Popkin Software has expanded its System Architect enterprise architecture and modeling toolset to include greater support for business-oriented process management, the company said at this week's DCI Meta Business Process Management conference in Boston. With the next version of System Architect (Version 10), due in July, the company will include integrated support for the XML-based Business Process Execution Language (BPEL).
Business intelligence (BI) must be real-time as well as right time, and that means business activity monitoring (BAM) and business process monitoring (BPM) need XML, according to Anant Jhingran, IBM's director of business intelligence.
Many a corporate Web portal has been tripped up by a need to classify content. Over the years, this has stubbornly remained a place where humans outshine machinery. In a new product that takes a new approach to classifying, search specialist Verity Inc. looks to better empower those humans in the organization that are most capable of classifying the content with which they work.
ADT's Programmers Report occasionally looks at security
issues from the point of view of source code analysis and better coding
practices. We recently met with Chris Wysopal, vice president of R&D for
@stake Inc., and thought he had a different take on this issue. What follows are
excerpts from an e-mail interview.
Jon Bork, Intel's director of cross architecture, has a solution: mobilize all of your applications from the get-go. "We have been telling ISVs that we believe mobilized software should be the only version of their software," Bork says.
Few industry buzzwords have maintained the kind of traction we have seen from the Real-Time Enterprise (RTE). The ideal of a system that allows managers to get information about their companies in real time for faster decision-making, improved performance management, and quicker reactions to change has captured the imagination of managers everywhere. RTE is an ideal that is fast becoming a competitive requirement.
AmberPoint is on a roll. As one of the few real leaders in the Web services management space, according to most of the analysts who cover this arena, the firm recently announced that it is making available a new release of its software.
The Eclipse Foundation announces the availability of the latest version of the Eclipse Platform -- Eclipse 3.0 -- which adds an enhanced version of its Java IDE, a new rich-client platform, and the integration of Java Swing with the Eclipse Standard Widget Toolkit.
Microsoft is sharing more information than ever before about coming releases. Is
this just making it easier for developers to bite the hand that feeds them? Or
is the sharing all one-way, with no listening?
Enterprise server growth will continue throughout 2004, expanding worldwide spending for servers by 5% to $53 billion.
Macrovision said the deal represents a $76 million cash transaction, with an additional payment of up to $20 million due, depending on InstallShield’s performance after the purchase.
There's lots of talk these days about the growing presence of open source in the enterprise. Linux is everywhere, and many IT managers are feeling the pressure to get going with an open-source project. Yet for many, this is still uncharted territory.
Development managers continue to face challenges as they deploy their apps over ever-wider networks. Among companies seeking to help address these challenges is RouteScience. The software company uses a decision-making engine that takes factors like application priorities and expected network behavior, and correlates this with real-time network performance to tune a network for optimal performance.
Developers need lots of skills, including logical thinking, the ability to plan,
attention to detail, and so on. But did you ever stop to think about the
importance of sneakiness in the developer world?
It is probably too early to say for sure, but it appears that Web services standards are quietly changing the world of development. Web services represent a detente of sorts between two big developer camps -- IBM and Microsoft.
One of the biggest challenges facing developers of applications that run on mobile devices is the intermittent access users have to wireless networks. The situation has been dubbed "occasionally connected" computing and, improvements and promises of the industry notwithstanding, it's not likely to change any time soon. BEA Systems is working on an interesting approach to helping developers cope with this sometimes-on-sometimes-off environment.
In July, customers will gather at IBM's annual developer conference in Grapevine, Texas, where the fuller integration of Rational products into the IBM world will be a prime topic.
While many Java toolmakers are members of Eclipse, which bills itself as "a community committed to the implementation of a universal platform for tools integration," the newest member is also bringing Ada. Aonix, an international company with headquarters in San Diego and Paris, also makes Java tools, but it is porting its Ada95 tool suite to the Eclipse platform, said Jacques Brygier, the firm's vice president of marketing.