Application Development Trends' News


Suit may delay Lindows shipment

A second preview version of the much-anticipated Lindows operating system shipped last week, but users said the latest implementation still cannot run Microsoft applications, the ultimate goal of creator Linux.com, and few expect a final version to ship as scheduled this spring.

At Tech.Ed: Microsoft says it has shipped 1 million Visual Studio .NET packs

Microsoft Corp. development tools managers put forward the company’s evolving vision for XML-based Web services at the Tech.Ed 2002 conference in New Orleans. --Apr. 12

Planning -- not mergers -- key to R&D success, says Eli Lilly CIO

Careful planning and a dedication to sharing data across divisions, not bigger IT budgets, is the key to improving IT productivity, says Roy Dunbar, CIO at Eli Lilly & Co.

Explaining Java and Web services

One of the biggest problems with Web services, said David Chappell and Tyler Jewell, is explaining it -- that is, pulling all the pieces together into a coherent and hype-free description of what Web services are and how developers can create and deploy them.

In Brief: CA sells app software to SSA

SSA Global Technologies has acquired the supply chain management, financial management and human resource management product lines of the Computer Associates interBiz applications division. -Apr. 8

Meta: Make way for IT open source revolution

Open source software continues to win adherents among a range of software developers, but especially among corporate coders, who tech watchers said are transforming it into a standard way to build and deliver software. Analysts at Stamford, Conn.-based research and consulting firm Meta Group predict that the trend will continue and strongly urge IT development units to be ready for it.

Will dirty data always be with us?

IT departments are dealing with more data than ever, but it is locked up in a patchwork of disparate repositories: legacy systems, relational databases, data warehouses, Web pages, e-mail and the like.

Wireless world embracing embedded Java: Sun

A slew of vendors, including host Sun Microsystems Inc., used the JavaOne platform to pushed to extend the Wireless Revolution. -Apr. 2, 2002

Sun pushes to join Web services battle

Sun has outlined several plans for Web services during, including the availability of the second early access release of the Java Web Services Developer Pack (WSDP). -Apr. 2, 2002

Sybase to resell JBuilder

Sybase Inc. turns to longtime tools rival Borland Software Corp. in an effort to gain a foothold in the Java development tool battle.

Start-up Eternal shows way to ORB-oriented fault tolerance

Eternal releases versions of FT/ORB and NIFTI fault-detector notifier software.

At JavaOne, Embarcadero UML tool runs on WebSphere Developer

Embarcadero Technologies unveils a version of its Describe UML design tool that runs within IBM's WebSphere Studio Application Developer.

Sun targets Microsoft ASP and Passport

At JavaOne, Sun outlines its plans for the SunONE Platform for Network Identity.

Web services flow from JavaOne

JavaOne 2002 will make the case for Java over Microsoft and .NET as the platform of choice in the emerging world of Web services.

At JavaOne, some deal with data

Poet Software and other vendors have launched an interactive Web community for educating users about Java Data Objects.

BEA WebLogic update

BEA has a new version of its popular WebLogic application server. Enhancements include a new security framework. -Mar. 21, 2002

Straight-Through Processing boosts XML spending

Expenditures for XML implementation in financial services may reach $8.5 billion by 2005, driven by the need for so-called Straight Through Processing. -Mar. 21, 2002

Putnam buys analytic software

Putnam Investments has signed an agreement to install data navigation and analytics technology from Endeca Technologies Inc. -Mar. 21, 2002

HP-Compaq Upate: It ain't over till it's over

"Election night" could be prolonged as the blockbuster HP-Compaq merger is put to shareholders. It looks like a close one. -Mar. 20, 2002

Bio-IT bubbles out of the lab

A new market has been created by the convergence of biological sciences and IT, and it is referred to as "bio-IT." -Mar. 19, 2002