Tuesday, February 28, 2006
ScholarOne® Launches Web Services for Application Information Exchange (ScholarOne)
Monday, February 27, 2006
Google Base will get e-commerce functions (InfoWorld)
Ask seeks answers without Jeeves (FT)
Google Desktop for the enterprise remains controversial (InfoWorld)
Ask Jeeves' Relaunch Does Little to Clarify Future Strategy (Gartner)
Friday, February 24, 2006
Google's Web page hosting service closed to new users (InfoWorld)
IBM Positioned in Magic Quadrant for Product Information Management Software (Market Wire)
According to Gartner, this market is attracting end-user organizations that are trying to achieve a single view of product data. Gartner expects to see strong growth across a wide range of industries, including retail, consumer goods, industrial, automotive, life sciences and distribution/wholesale. By 2009, the product information management market is expected to reach revenue of more than $500 million.
Buzzword: Product Information Management (PIM)
Google Preps Strategy For Real-Time Business Search (CRN)
Thursday, February 23, 2006
Imperia AG mit Schwerpunkt Portalintegration auf der CeBIT 2006 (contentmanager.de)
Die Imperia AG präsentiert die 8. Version ihres Enterprise Content Management Systems Imperia mit zahlreichen neuen Funktionalitäten auf der CeBIT in Hannover. Dabei liegt der Schwerpunkt der Präsentation auf dem Thema Portalintegration. In diesem Rahmen stellt die Imperia AG verschiedene Möglichkeiten zur Realisierung komplexer Internet- und Intranetportale vor. So steht u.a. die im Herbst fertiggestellte SAP-Portalintegration nun als von SAP zertifizierte Schnittstelle zur Verfügung. Das Zusammenspiel von Imperia 8 mit dem SAP NetWeaver Portal verstärkt die Vorteile beider Systeme zu einem Optimum und schafft erhebliche Synergieeffekte bei der Verwaltung von Unternehmensinhalten. Mit dieser Kombination lassen sich komplexe Unternehmensszenarien mit Standardanwendungen aus den Bereichen ERP, SCM und CRM komfortabel abbilden.
Finding the Right Content (Line56)
We first came across iPhrase in 2003, when we profiled the company's natural-language search contribution to a big call center. A lot has happened to iPhrase in the intervening three years, notably its acquisition by IBM, but the search technology's proposition remains just as relevant in an age of exploding content.
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
CeBIT 2006: FIRSTSpirit - Professionelles CMS in SAP-Portalumfeld (FIRSTSpirit)
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
Microsoft 'Snaps' Office into Dynamics applications (InfoWorld)
The tools are similar to software, code-named Mendocino, being co-developed by Microsoft (Profile, Products, Articles) and SAP (Profile, Products, Articles) AG to link Office to SAP's ERP (enterprise resource planning) system.
Monday, February 20, 2006
Microsoft's Office Live services debut with e-mail, Web hosting services (InfoWorld)
Friday, February 17, 2006
Managing Google Desktop Search (Line56)
Office 2007 Gets New Forms, Groove Servers (CRN)
The week in technology: Office update fails to impress (FT)
Can Google gain a foothold in the enterprise? (InfoWorld)
Google's got its eyes on your corporate data, and if its ability to parlay its whip-smart Web search technology into a vast empire of consumer services is any indication, you may be Googling enterprise apps and data sooner than you think.
For several years, Google (Profile, Products, Articles) has been putting the wheels in motion for a serious enterprise play, but the Web-specific nature of its search has limited its reach. That obstacle may have fallen last week as consulting services company BearingPoint announced a partnership to extend the GSA (Google Search Appliance) throughout the enterprise with services, support, customized plug-ins, and security integration.
Thursday, February 16, 2006
Manage Google's Desktop Search Now or Lock It Out (Gartner)
Manage Google's Desktop Search Now or Lock It Out (Gartner)
Wednesday, February 15, 2006
Ajax - Week of 02/09/2006 (Analyst Views)
It was roughly a year ago, with the introduction of Google Maps, that the term Ajax was coined. Ajax, an acronym for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, is not a technology itself but a web development technique that combines preexisting technologies that have been around for years. A recent report by IDC refers to Ajax as, "A development technique that uses HTML, JavaScript, and often XML to allow Web applications to communicate with web servers and present new information to the user without continually reloading the page." This may not appear on the face to be significant, to many it may be read as 'faster loading web pages,' but it is. The spreading use of Ajax has already raised the bar for Web development; further, there are those that say that Ajax will make desktop applications obsolete. Though IDC does not go that far, they do state that, "Ajax may be the buzzword of 2005, and some of the hype is deserved: it closes one significant gap between Web and desktop applications by allowing Web applications to move away from their traditional, page-based model."
As stated above, one of the first Web applications to make use of Ajax was Google Maps. Google Maps differs largely from prior map programs in that it allows for features such as zooming and rotation without requiring the page to refresh. Prior to this the process was more or less, 'click zoom and wait for the new page to load;' any user of Google Maps will quickly notice its fluidity. Another example of Ajax in action is Gap's (or many other) eCommerce site; here users can get close ups of merchandise or see merchandise displayed in an alternate color without refreshing the page. The NetFlix web site is also a notable user of Ajax; here Ajax is used to present supplemental information about movies when the title is hovered over. This implementation is significant for two reasons, it avoids the need to load all relevant information initially, which would slow the page load, and it does not require the user click on the 'details' link to gain access to such information. Microsoft is also using Ajax in its web-based version of Outlook, as is Google's Gmail. All this shows the power of Ajax on the Web, but what does it mean for the future of desktop applications.
Those that would state that a typical desktop application, for example Microsoft Word, will be replaced by Ajax (or similarly) enabled technologies base the idea, at least in part, on Ajax's ability to store data remotely as it is typed, rather than requiring a user to hit a 'save' or 'enter' key. In this scenario a user could create a document on any PC and have it saved in cyberspace for retrieval from any PC at a later time. This functionality is already available at sites such as Writely.com; it is also the direction that Microsoft Live! is moving in; what Ajax could do is make this possible without an Internet browser.
As far as overtaking common desktop applications there are several barriers that would need to be surpassed for this to happen, at the top of the list are connectivity and code. A true web-based application can only run if the user is connected to the Web with a fast connection; and JavaScript, on which Ajax relies, is not noted for its streamlined code. Despite these barriers, Ajax according to IDC, has already transformed, "Expectations and standards for what a Web application can (and should) do." With the need for desktop applications to be more portable, implementations which allow this will continue to gain in popularity. However, as IDC puts it, "Ajax is hot right now, and many are suggesting that it will make the desktop application obsolete. Remote scripting is worthy of hype and attention, but as with most over-hyped technologies, such claims are extreme. Significant gaps remain between desktop and Web applications."
Tuesday, February 14, 2006
Here comes Measure Map (Google Blog)
BearingPoint partners with Google to launch Search Solutions Practice (Google)
Monday, February 13, 2006
Schmidt's Google Broadens Gmail Reach (Forbes)
IKEA Updates Online Search (Line56)
Saturday, February 11, 2006
Blogs reshaping content management tools (InfoWorld)
Friday, February 10, 2006
Privacy fears over Google’s new software (FT)
Lotus Touts Role of Blogs and Wikis (newsfactor.com)
IBM/Lotus plans to expand its corporate collaboration tools by adding social relationship, behavior mapping and alerting technology that lets users easily share ideas, data, research and corporate knowledge.
Customers are hoping that the tools can help revolutionize the way their organizations communicate, share data, and analyze information and work patterns. The goal is to help improve collaboration.
At its annual Lotusphere conference, IBM/Lotus showed off plans to infuse its entire collaborative software lineup with social networking technology such as blogs, wikis and syndication feeds. While those tools are changing the face of the Internet, Lotus is adapting the concepts and features for internal corporate use in much the same way instant messaging was adapted for real-time communication.
Analysts still see fuzzy future for MSN as new chief takes helm (InfoWorld)
Wednesday, February 08, 2006
Tuesday, February 07, 2006
contentXXL – Business Content Management für den Mittelstand (contentxxl)
SpringCM Releases Version 3.0 of its On-Demand Content Management Solution (Business Wire)
SpringCM Releases Latest Version of Content Management Solution (Supply & Demand Chain Executive)
New functionality gives businesses better collaboration, adds version control for documents and files
Chicago — February 7, 2006 — SpringCM, an on-demand content management company, today unveiled the latest version of its Web-based, integrated content management product, which it said delivers greater collaboration capabilities and content routing for files and documents.