| 1. |
QAD Ends Its Protracted Dry Season, Not Yet On an Easy Street ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Apr 11, 2000 Abstract : QAD Inc. reported $0.06 of diluted net income per share, or net income of $2.1 million, on record total revenue of $70.9 million for the fourth fiscal quarter ended January 31, 2000. This compares with $0.16 of diluted net loss per share or a net loss of $4.9 million on total revenue of $65.4 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 1999.
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| 2. |
Sendmail, Inc. and Disappearing, Inc. Team Up to Add Enhanced Security ( Pages)
by P. Hayes
Mar 6, 2000 Abstract : Administrators of the sendmail system, coupled with Disappearing, Inc.'s product will be able to set specific
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| 3. |
MAPICS, Inc. to Acquire Pivotpoint, Expanding e-business Offerings for Mid-Sized Manufacturing Establishments ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jan 10, 2000 Abstract : On December 15, MAPICS, Inc. a leading provider of enterprise business applications for mid-sized manufacturing companies, announced a definitive agreement to acquire Pivotpoint, Inc., a company whose proven technology and visionary e-business solutions place them at the forefront of the extended enterprise application space. With this aggressive move, MAPICS immediately expands its offerings across multiple platforms, including Windows NT, UNIX, Linux and AS/400.
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| 4. |
Interview with Jeff Bates of SourceForge.net, Slashdot, and the OSTG ( Pages)
by Josh Chalifour
Jul 26, 2005 Abstract : Jeff Bates's experience in developing and managing SourceForge.net and Slashdot communities sheds light on encouraging the interest of participants in the open source community. He discusses important technology considerations toward aiding distributed software development efforts.
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| 5. |
Epicor Claims The Forefront Of CRM.NET-ification Part 1 ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jun 11, 2002 Abstract : By harnessing .NET possibly more zealously than its creator Microsoft’s Great Plains and Navision enterprise counterparts, and while difficult market conditions continue to persist, Epicor might be showing us that ‘a brave heart and wise mind’ can keep it in the mid-market leadership race amongst aslew of formidable opponents.
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| 6. |
Sun’s Java Won’t Be In Microsoft’s .NET – Complicate Your Integration? You .BET ( Pages)
by M. Reed
Feb 19, 2001 Abstract : Sun and Microsoft have announced a settlement in Sun’s lawsuit regarding Microsoft’s use of Java technology. Microsoft was given the choice of conforming to the Java standard or opting out and they chose to opt out. Under terms of the agreement Microsoft cannot use Java in their forthcoming .NET initiative. Of course both vendors claim victory, but inevitably it will be the customer who loses.
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| 7. |
Understand J2EE and .NET Environments Before You Choose ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Dec 8, 2004 Abstract : The Microsoft .NET versus J2EE platform argument often takes on the vehemence of a religious debate. Choosing one may amount to
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| 8. |
Microsoft .NET-managed Code Enablement: Examples and Challenges ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Oct 5, 2006 Abstract : Intuitive, Visibility, and Epicor offer .NET Framework-managed code products, but their
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| 9. |
Microsoft .NET Enablement: Analysis and Cautions ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Oct 4, 2006 Abstract : Using technologies that are intrinsically compatible should result in faster and less costly development. Thus, any application suite rewritten in the Microsoft .NET managed code framework should not have to contend with inefficiencies resulting from mixing or wrapping technologies.
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