As the portal market becomes increasingly more competitive, the vendor choices grow to be even more complex. We discuss the value of an enterprise portal and methods for determining its return on investment.
Vendors tout new products and services designed to appeal to their bread-and-butter application server constituencies—enterprise developers
The thought of a vendor association dictating a schema for how companies should characterize their data is a frightening one.
The results of the 2004 Enterprise Systems Outsourcing Survey are in. In the last two sections of our report, we look at contracts (size and duration) and explore the human costs of outsourcing.
Companies ally to develop enterprise-ready Linux solutions running on top of Unisys hardware
Blame unusable security, not users; Apple worm; high-speed IPS
An all-in-one approach to performance management has its merits, but companies should look beyond their ERP stacks, too
New security-risk management tools bridge the security/business gap
IBM has quietly stitched together a data-access portfolio that helps position it as a prominent player in the burgeoning EII and BPM segments
With the November 15 deadline looming for many organizations, many companies still don’t have a plan for auditing and archiving instant messages.
There’s little agreement about the prospectus for IT hiring—but there’s also little doubt that outsourcing is a hit
The two partners will provide software, services, and support for less than $500 per user per month
Big Blue says its Classic Federation product boasts several advantages over existing mainframe data-access products
The company's president and CEO helped create SCSI earlier in his career, and the company has since overcome some interesting technical challenges.
The results of the 2004 Enterprise Systems Outsourcing Survey are in. In the third article of our series, we look at what functions are outsourced. While application development is at the top of the list, we found a surprisingly large number of companies are outsourcing all IT functions.
Antivirus and browser vulnerabilities, unsubscribe may be unwise
Data profiling stalwart taps Similarity Systems to provide much-needed data quality capabilities
Free hard-drive indexing utility raises corporate security and privacy questions
Microsoft’s CRM suite is less than two years old, but it’s already being used by 1,600 customers
After over five years in the making, the XML Query language standard is still missing in action