Enterprise Applications | News, how-tos, features, reviews, and videos
In this issue: Sesame Street and Open Souce; More demand for wireless; Xerox goes green; ROI vs. TCO; Starbucks seeks feedback; Hacking the election; BPM obstacles; and Unified Communication by the numbers.
The BPM market is hot, and entrenched players will be tough to displace as SAP plays catch up in the business process management space. Here's what SAP plans to deliver and when.
April retail sales were better than expected, but economic doom-and-gloom is everywhere. A Retail Systems Research report shows why those retailers who think long-term about customer service technologies and employee-facing tools are winning now.
Despite security concerns and reservations about how Software as a Service (SaaS) will integrate with existing on premise systems, enterprises surveyed cited easier maintenance and cheaper cost as a key factor for buying SaaS.
Demand was high, but the infamous system that crashed in fall 2007 withstood the offering of 1.38 million tickets for 16 Olympic sports on Monday.
Hot topics of conversation included: Business ByDesign's slow rollout and future plans, Rimini Street's offering of third-party maintenance for SAP applications, and the SAP and RIM partnership for business users' BlackBerrys.
Seth Ravin's company made its name by providing half-price third-party support for Oracle's aging PeopleSoft, JD Edwards and Siebel applications. At SAP's Sapphire Conference, Rimini Street announced that it is now going after SAP.
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