Maker of compression utility adds features to flagship product.
New technology helps deliver better health services.
A change of management methods pays off.
New application saves health care dollars.
XML finds a place in communications.
Standards group approves a language as an open standard.
Two companies expand their partnership.
BEA reaches out to legacy applications.
A preview of what's in the works for Visual Studio.
New and veteran companies team up.
Borland's is showing off its Project Sidewinder IDE for the .NET Framework. It's not ready for prime time just yet, but when it is, the new developer tool suite will compete with Microsoft's VS .NET.
Microsoft believes technology is aligning to make 2003 the year XML Web services "take off" in applications for mobile devices, according to Steve Lombardi, technical product manager, Microsoft's MapPoint .NET.
To celebrate the fifth birthday of XMl 1.0, two members of the working group that developed the specification reflect on its birth and where it is now.
IBM's just unveiled DB2 Information Integrator family represents the fruits of several IBM initiatives, according to experts inside and outside of the Armonk, N.Y.-based computer giant.
Neon Systems Inc., Sugar Land, Texas, last week unveiled a monitoring/management tool designed to shed light onto the 'black hole' of legacy mainframe processing connected to distributed applications based on J2EE and .NET platforms.
Java application server leader BEA recently took a step toward addressing the problems of developers who are trying to write Java apps that use XML with the launch of XML Beans, presently available as an online technology preview.
Dallas-based Fuego Inc., a developer of business
process management software, last week unveiled Fuego for Banking, the first in a planned series of industry-specific business process management solutions.
Sun Microsystems last week disclosed its decision to delay the release of its J2EE 1.4 spec until this summer. Developers predict the move won't slow the shipping of Web services
slated to be completed this spring.
Sun Microsystems has unveiled the first of a series of roadmaps for future platforms to help vendors develop wireless services for mobile phones.
The rush to Linux in some corporate IT operations is based on faulty lines of reasoning, according to a recent report compiled by analysts at Meta Group;