Everyone’s doing it these days, so will Oracle jump on the Linux bandwagon?
IBM says its Information Server slices, dices, and delivers data of all kinds, from almost any source, and in almost any conceivable format.
Software-as-a-Service isn’t just a fad. If market watcher Gartner is to be believed, it’s a full-bore paradigm shift
Some BI market watchers think the Sunopsis buy could spell the beginning of the end for Oracle’s Warehouse Builder.
How an enterprise architect can help you maximize your investment in BPM and BRE tools and other technologies.
When disaster strikes and victims flood into an emergency room, doctors conduct triage to determine the severity of injuries and who gets treatment first. Companies can similarly prepare for the inevitable data breach by building a cross-disciplined incident team trained to assess the damage, stop the bleeding, and respond appropriately to regulatory bodies and customers.
If you’re only as secure as your weakest link, printers could be your biggest threat.
Project Blackbox might be a gimmick, but Sun’s virtualization moves are for real
Guarding against external threats is important, but don’t overlook legacy systems security.
How do you help businesses better manage information and increase the performance of their database and storage-related infrastructures?
Just as physical symptoms indicate underlying system imbalance in humans, an enterprise must be watchful of its technology and business warning signs.
The University of Toronto implements IBM’s new z9 Business Class system to increase and improve service levels while reducing costs
Advizor officials says Analyst Office isn’t a preemptive strike against Microsoft in the Office BI segment.
Old patent infringement lawsuits don’t die, they just sort of fritter away....
Dashboard pioneer announces Software-as-a-Service BI appliance offering
To reverse the rise of Web-application vulnerabilities, enterprises must patch more than just their operating systems.
Is a software-only solution to storage manipulation on the horizon?
Health insurance provider balances valuable mainframe logic against need for more manageable system
In many companies, developers use live data in unsound, test environments but remain unmindful of the fallout if that data leaks out. Why should your compliance guard be relaxed when developers use test data to design the systems that store and dole out access to such sensitive information? Here are five ways to manage test data in regulated environments.
Some mainframers think IBM’s $100 million could be better spent addressing training, licensing, and other long-standing Big-Iron pain points