Windows Servier 2008 beta unveils long-promised technology
Where is cloud computing headed?
New TDWI report focuses on the importance of best practices for creating KPIs.
Demand for BI and analytic technology could soon outpace demand, creating both risk and reward for IT professionals
Enterprise IT security pros will be busy in 2009
Enterprises will be able to deploy a new blocking tool to prevent unauthorized installations of the browser
Four reasons you should consider an investment in IT process automation
Why is IT the last department to have automated tools?
Why current security tools aren’t adequate, and what vendors and IT must do now to secure their environment.
To get the most from your Web 2.0 technologies, combine them with Enterprise 2.0.
All of the Energy Stars in the world will not keep the lights from going out.
Accelerates 3D graphics, improves network performance
AV solutions from McAfee, Symantec, and CA fail to disclose when they aren't functioning
Informal survey highlights misperceptions inhibiting open-source growth
Exec asks developers to ensure good customer experience prior to release
BI analyst Michael Schiff looks at the accuracy of the predictions he made last year, examines the major BI events of 2008, and suggests new trends to watch in 2009.
Plex rapid application development environment now lets developers model and generate Microsoft .NET-based services based on Windows Communication Foundation
"Critical" out-of-cycle patch for Internet Explorer
Financial disruption may hold promise for BI, but it will also transform BI itself: big tools to small tools, fewer analysts and more business users, and finally appreciation for human intelligence.
For BI professionals, it was a year in which several long-simmering trends seemed to coalesce and boil over.