Oracle’s new CRM offering does little to address deficiencies in areas where the company trails its competitors
One analyst says Office has become a BI Trojan horse as Microsoft builds in more BI capabilities and more end users start to work with it.
More XP SP2 woes, fraud awareness survey, Can-Spam's failure
Acquisition of PestPatrol signals single-console management of viruses, spam, and spyware may not be far away.
Understanding what the security templates can provide could be invaluable.
Big Blue also previews z/OS version 7, due out next year
New tool lets developers repackage host applications as XML Web services or .NET server components.
Controversy highlights the way an ambitious Big Blue competes with many of its long-time partners
While Windows file server consolidation is seen as a top priority by most IT directors, such projects can be tricky to undertake. In the second part of our two-part discussion, we explore the best practices that will help you manage the risks and problems of such projects.
SNIA gets into the education business
Informatica, SAS, and Ascential control the high-end ETL market, but the mid-market is still largely up for grabs as the low-end market shrinks.
Oracle’s retooled Supply Chain Management offering reflects its ambitions as a rising star in the SCM space
New technology in a user-friendly toolbar intercepts users from visiting such sites
Exploits expected to get worse, putting even more pressure on security managers
Users of Microsoft CRM who want to install the new Windows XP Service Pack 2 should expect to encounter a range of issues
Delaying XP Upgrades, AOL IM Buffer Overflow, Virus Source
The state of Idaho has tapped a zLinux solution to achieve immediate ROI of nearly half-a-million dollars annually
Consolidation is seen as a top priority by most IT directors, but understanding of storage consolidation as it relates to file servers is low. In the first in a two-part discussion, we explore the benefits and obstacles of server consolidation projects, and explore the impact on users.
U.S. firms must shape—or limit the impact of—a range of Chinese technology standards. Here are four strategies to follow.
Even though Intel has embraced 64-bit on the low-end with its new Xeon chips, it hasn’t given up on Itanium