SAP could be on the acquisition trail, hints co-CEO
SAP could be gearing up for a shopping spreed, after co-CEO Jim Hagemann Snabe told a German newspaper that one-third of revenue growth should come from acquisitions.
SAP could be gearing up for a shopping spreed, after co-CEO Jim Hagemann Snabe told a German newspaper that one-third of revenue growth should come from acquisitions.
I previously described speculation the last few days that H-P would acquire SAP as 'fanciful.' What I really meant was 'plain insane thinking.
SAP is preparing for the roll out of its Business byDesign cloud service bouyed by a reasonably good second quarter in the US...
The digital ink was barely dry on my post highlighting Ray Wang's findings around software maintenancebefore I was fielding a call with one of Oracle's big customers. I mean big and with a name you'll all know as a national treasure.
Google phone, Apple's countersuit against Nokia, the Crunchpad/JooJoo lawsuit and Microsoft's consumer business are at the top of the headlines.
I have to admit that I enjoy going to conferences and summits as an analyst, journalist or paid speaker. I'm treated well by the vendors who bring me, my expenses are covered (and if a speaker, a fee too of course) and I know a lot of the staff who of whichever vendor it is and I have a lot of friends among them.
Best known for its ERP software, SAP has a workforce of about 51,400 people in over 50 countries who serve more than 76,000 customers worldwide.
German software giant SAP today said it would shut down its TomorrowNow subsidiary, following damaging legal action with arch-rival Oracle.
A lack of information from the global headquarters of software giants Oracle and SAP has left the pairs' Australian divisions completely in the dark about what actions to take in the wake of the closure of SAP's Oracle services subsidiary TomorrowNow.
Although online business-to-business companies are struggling through another dismal quarter, none of the major players is ready to throw in the towel--at least yet.