| 1. |
Sendmail, Inc. and Disappearing, Inc. Team Up to Add Enhanced Security (3 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 'Time to Live' (TTL) for each piece of email prior to permanent deletion, allowing corporate email retention policies to be enforced.
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| 2. |
The Many Faces of PLM Part Two: The Future of the PLM Suite (6 Pages)
by Jim Brown
Dec 30, 2003 Abstract : The future of the PLM Suite will include more applications that cover product-related functionality and further expand the benefits available. As the PLM Suite matures, companies will benefit from increased functionality and increased integration between business processes. The ultimate expression of this more mature solution will result in a broad suite of focused, integrated applications that leverage a core of unified, structured product data - the PLM Platform.
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| 3. |
8 Ways Technology News Can Boost Your Bottom Line (1 Page)
by TEC Staff
Oct 1, 2007 Abstract : Breaking technology news can boost your bottom line. Find out how to get the IT technology news that matters for your business software selections-and discover how the latest technology news can help save you tens of thousands in implementation costs. If you'd like the most current technology news delivered straight to your in-box, sign up now for daily tech headlines and technology industry news updates.
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| 4. |
MAPICS, Inc. to Acquire Pivotpoint, Expanding e-business Offerings for Mid-Sized Manufacturing Establishments (3 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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| 5. |
BPM Showdown! Oracle's Hyperion System 9 vs. OutlookSoft vs. Cartesis Suite (1 Page)
by Lyndsay Wise
May 30, 2007 Abstract : I'm Lyndsay Wise, senior research analyst at Technology Evaluation Centers. Welcome to another in TEC's series of enterprise software Showdowns. Today's Showdown pits three of the top business performance management (BPM) vendors against each other in a head-to-head contest: Hyperion System 9 vs. OutlookSoft vs. Cartesis Suite! We hope you find this Showdown helpful and informative, and invite your comments and questions.
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| 6. |
The Quest for the Right Self-service Model: Enterprise Content Management Suite or Integrated, Best-of-breed? (3 Pages)
by Hans Mercx
Mar 19, 2007 Abstract : Organizations are looking for self-service models to manage their internal and external content. Content management systems are the answer, but then the question becomes which to choose—an all-in-one enterprise content management suite, or an integrated, best-of-breed point solution?
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| 7. |
ROI Systems, Inc.: Will Slow and Steady Remain in the Race? (7 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jun 22, 2000 Abstract : Over past two decades, ROI Systems has shown the commitment to deliver solid discrete manufacturing functionality and superior customer support, with modest growth and cautious new technology introduction as a consequence. Owing to its slow growth, ROI has achieved a small market presence in general and insignificant global brand awareness, an undeveloped channel outside of the North American market.
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| 8. |
Network Engines, Inc. - Double the CPUs for Web Serving (7 Pages)
by R. Krause
Nov 1, 1999 Abstract : Network Engines, Inc. is a leading vendor of extremely thin rackmount servers used in the rapidly growing area of web serving. In this note, we examine the company and its outlook.
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| 9. |
Voting Technology: An Evaluation of Requirements and Solutions (11 Pages)
by Nelson Nones
Jan 2, 2001 Abstract : The issues created by the use of punch card ballots, an obsolete technology, during the recent US Presidential election are similar to the ones that businesses confront every day when dealing with technological change. It is therefore instructive to examine voting technology issues in the way that most businesses would approach an important information technology decision.
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