Oracle Plans Q1 2011 Release for Fusion Apps
Oracle's Fusion Applications will finally be available in the first quarter of 2011, Larry Ellison said at OpenWorld on Sunday. Larry Ellison - Oracle Corporation - Oracle - Databases - Mark Hurd feeds.pcworld.com |
FarFinder Returns to App Store Under Temporary New Name
Last month, Apple removed FarFinder, Flying Mac's client for remotely accessing files on your Mac, from the App Store, after first warning its developer about... feeds.pcworld.com |
Tweet Library Lets You Archive, Organize Twitter Posts
By its very name, you might think Twitter is ephemeral, your 140 character messages fluttering off into the ether as time passes. But what if you want to delve... feeds.pcworld.com |
Customize the Hardware on This Android Phone
If you haven’t been able to find the phone you want among all the options out there, then look no further than the German Synapse One. feeds.pcworld.com |
Software Top 100 Ranking Shows Market Dynamics
Dennis Byron submits: Balder Verberne of softwaretop100.org, the research house based in The Netherlands, released his annual list of the top 100 software companies in the market worldwide in October. John Desmond of Software 500/Software magazine fame came out with his annual list recently too. I like both lists -- and both researchers -- but I am partial to the purity of the Software Top 100. The Software 500 has added non-software-specific services revenue to its ranking methodology in the last few years. As I've noted elsewhere, as a guy who used to be able to build such lists in his sleep when working for IDC, I like to give such research a quick once-over to see if I agree with the rankings and relative sizes attributed to each enterprise software provider on the list. Everyone -- including the big quant houses such as Dataquest and IDC -- agrees that IBM, Microsoft (MSFT), Oracle (ORCL) and SAP are the leaders in the software market. That's in alphabetical order, not actual ranking. Complete Story » seekingalpha.com |