Fellow ZDNet bloggers explore the hard road to SOA
Notice how nobody is disputing that something is holding back SOA? What is that something?
Notice how nobody is disputing that something is holding back SOA? What is that something?
Sun Microsystems, IBM, and HP, are laying off thousands of engineers in the U.S. and replacing them with others in third-world countries.
The growing arenas of SOA, Web 2.0, cloud computing, webby applications design/delivery, OSGi container flexibility, PHP, Ruby on Rails, Adobe and Silverlight cross-browser development/deployment -- all are moving beyond the Java orbit.
As we wait with baited breath for Oracle to finally get the green light on the Sun acquisition, those of us that speculated whether we would see an increased push into the Java EE enriched enterprise space in the new world of Sun have had our suspicions confirmed.
Microsoft has provided more detail on the next release of its Navision ERP application, which will have an Outlook-style user interface and more sophisticated business analytics
Open Source in Government: Some governments have embraced the potential of open source, while others seem culturally opposed to the whole concept
But Red Hat says it has no plans to include the open source .Net implementation in its commercial distribution
The chip designer is joining with major consumer electronics manufacturers to tailor open-source software for running non-PC devices
News analysis: But it could open the doors for others...
It’s not everyday that you get to meet a rock legend. It’s certainly not everyday that you get to go to a software development symposium and meet a rock legend.