Archive for May, 2011

Indian Overseas Bank picks consultant for software arm

May 25th, 2011

Moving ahead with its plans to float a banking software subsidiary, the city-based Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) has short-listed consultancy firm Ernst and Young to assist in its new endeavour, the bank’s top official said.

Speaking to reporters here, Indian Overseas Bank CMD M. Narendra said: “We have short-listed Ernst and Young as the consultant for the project. The bank board will take a formal decision on this.”

IOB’s core banking solution (CBS) was developed in-house and the decision to float a separate subsidiary was taken when another bank approached it for the banking software.

As the bank was not in the business of selling software, it was not able to do that. But a separate subsidiary will enable it to vend its software.

Officials told IANS that Ernst and Young will first value the bank’s CBS which will be the bank’s investment in proposed software subsidiary.

The consultancy firm will also study the financial position of the probable partners who have been short-listed by the bank and work out the other modalities of forming a joint venture.

Narendra said the bank will add 400 more branches this year taking its total network to 2,600.

“We will also add 1,000 ATMs (automated teller machines) this year to our current 1,403 ATMs,” Narendra said.

Officials told IANS that the bank has a mix of own ATMs and hired ones.

Earlier, the bank launched two cards partnering with American Express Banking Corporation to meet the needs of its high net worth customers.

Speaking about the new venture, Shailesh Baidwan, country manager and head of consumer card, American Express, said the two cards will first be distributed to IOB’s customers in cities like New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Bangalore.

He said American Express is planning to sign up similar partnership deals – two or three – for the east region.

Source:http://mangalorean.com/news.php?newstype=local&newsid=240732

GlobalLogic Acquires Hyderabad-Based Rofous Software

May 25th, 2011

GlobalLogic Inc has acquired Hyderabad-based Rofous Software Private Limited, a product and content engineering company.

The deal will help GlobalLogix to expand its presence in India and will add content engineering to its portfolio. The deal will take GlobalLogic’s global workforce from about 4,000 employees to more than 5,500.

Founded in 2006 by Brahma Naidu Vella and Ravi Velagapudi, Rofous Software provides IT applications solutions and services and it’s clients list includes companies like LinkedIn andStryker.
The company has offices in Hyderabad and Bengaluru in India, Benga Milpitas, California; Redmond and Washington. It serves industries like insurance, healthcare, education, logistics, retail and telecom.

Headquartered in McLean (US) – Global Logic specializes in outsourced software product development. It is backed Goldman Sachs, Draper/New Atlantic Ventures, Sequoia Capitaland New Enterprise Associates (NEA). It has offices in Argentina, Germany, India, Israel, Ukraine, and UK.

Recently Germany-based RTS Realtime Systems Group acquired Pune-based technology solutions provider, First Futures Software Engineering Pvt. Ltd which will enable RTS to gain a development team in India and a global product suite.

Source:http://www.dealcurry.com/20110525-GlobalLogic-Acquires-Hyderabad-Based-Rofous-Software.htm

Apple acknowledges Mac Defender malware, promises software update

May 25th, 2011

Apple has decided to publicly acknowledge the Mac Defender malware that seems to be creeping onto Mac users’ computers. The company posted an online support document Tuesday evening that outlines how to identify and get rid of the program, which attempts to trick users into handing over their credit card information. The company also promised to issue a software update soon that will specifically hunt out and remove Mac Defender and its variants.

“A recent phishing scam has targeted Mac users by redirecting them from legitimate websites to fake websites which tell them that their computer is infected with a virus,” Apple wrote in its support document. “In the coming days, Apple will deliver a Mac OS X software update that will automatically find and remove Mac Defender malware and its known variants. The update will also help protect users by providing an explicit warning if they download this malware.”

The much-welcome acknowledgement from Apple comes less than a week after it came out that real users were beginning to see this malware in the wild a little more often than usual. When we investigated the issue, we were told by several Apple Store Geniuses that they had also seen a spike—one Genius at a large Apple Store said he had seen malware reports in his store go from approximately 0.2 to percent to 5.8 percent in a matter of weeks, with the large majority of those being Mac Defender or its variants, often known as Mac Security or Mac Protector. (Smaller, third-party support folks were somewhat split on whether there had been a spike in malware reports.)

At the time, one of the more controversial aspects of Apple’s reaction was that there was none—Apple had instructed its AppleCare and retail staff not to even acknowledge Mac Defender’s existence, and not to remove it from users’ infected computers.

Now, however, the company has apparently had a change of heart. In the support doc, Apple says to trash the app immediately if you haven’t installed it yet, but if you have, there’s a series of steps to follow in order to get rid of it. And, of course, there’s also the lazy route: if you have Mac Defender installed but haven’t given it your credit card information yet, you could just wait for Apple to issue its software update and have it removed automatically. Or, you can use the Mac Defender removal tool from Icrontic.

Source:http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2011/05/apple-acknowledges-mac-defender-malware-promises-software-update.ars

Software AG Buying In-Memory Management Supplier Terracotta

May 25th, 2011

Software AG is buying Terracotta Inc., a young company that has helped pioneer in-memory management for Java systems. The deal is expected to be completed in the next week, Terracotta CEO Amit Pandey said in an interview.

No direct dollar figure was put on the agreement, but Darmstadt, Germany-based Software AG said it was in “the midrange of double-digit millions of euros.” That reference could be translated into a figure that is somewhere near–probably below–the equivalent of $76 million. Pandey said the vagueness of the figure is typical of acquirers who refuse to disclose a purchase price, and it was “not being obfuscated because the price wasn’t attractive to Terracotta,” he said.

RIM is known as a force within the enterprise, and it wants its Playbook tablet to be no exception. It is working hard with developers, and companies like SAP are embracing the platform. Here are a few examples of what you’ll see when it ships.

Terracotta is a venture-funded company that has gone through three rounds of funding, without disclosing the amounts. Investors in the third round in January 2008 included Accel Partners, Benchmark Capital, Goldman Sachs, and DAG Ventures.

Terracotta will be operated as an independent business unit inside Software AG, and Pandey said he will retain his title as Terracotta CEO.

Pandey said the market for in-memory systems has heated up over the last two years and Terracotta was ready to be acquired in order to play on a larger field. “We have a total of six sales people. Software AG has 1,000. We wanted to move our natural acceleration to the next level,” he said.

The space that Terracotta and others have pioneered, pulling both a Java application and the data it uses into the pooled memories of a server cluster, fits the needs of big website applications that may face a need for rapid scale up. “The in-memory market is hot and it ends up being a bit of a land grab–who’s got the people to put in front of customers. Even when we get leads, we don’t have the time and people to follow up on them,” Pandey added.

When both application modules and data are available in memory, they can perform up to 1,000 times faster than if they must be retrieved from disk, said Steve McGuire, VP of engineering at Software AG. The capability makes Software AG’s application integration and messaging product line more broadly useful to large websites and other cluster users.

McQuire said Terracotta’s Ehcache is a de facto standard for in-memory use by programmers of enterprise Java systems. In addition, Terracotta has broadened its reach by incorporating two open source communities into its operations and product line, the original Ehcache system and the Quartz application scheduling system. He estimated that there are more than a million Ehcache-using programmers and an equal number of Quartz users.

Terracotta’s main commercial product, Ehcache Enterprise, converts Ehcache from a single server into a multiserver product, allowing a programmer’s application to take advantage of pooled server memories to scale to meet demand.

In addition, McQuire cited Terracotta’s ability to add a second product, Big Memory, to a Java application, which makes up to a terabyte of cache memory available for the application, application server, and related middleware. Java applications more typically are limited to 1 to 2 GBs of memory before their need to perform garbage collection becomes a constraint on their use of more memory.

Terracotta started out as a proprietary company in 2003 and switched to an open source model of offering its core product for free download, with enterprise editions and technical support offered at a price. The San Francisco company has 55 employees. It expanded its customer base by combining its core product with the widely used open source Ehcache, which it purchased in 2009.

Software AG spokesmen made it clear the Terracotta-supported open source communities were part of the attractiveness of the deal. The company “is committed to fully supporting Terracotta’s open source communities in further developing this next-generation in-memory technology,” CTO Wolfram Jost said in the announcement.

Software AG is the original supplier of the Adabas database system and Natural fourth generation language. It acquired WebMethods in 2007 and expanded into application integration and business process management. It will add Terracotta’s in-memory management system to many of its existing products by the end of 2011 and use it also to launch a “cloud enablement” platform in 2012, said McGuire. “We’ll fit all our code in cache. We’ll put everything in memory,” he predicted.

Pandey said the two companies have large banking and retail customers in common who had urged them to combine their product lines.

Source:http://www.informationweek.com/news/software/app_optimization/229625518

Microsoft launches handset software upgrade

May 25th, 2011

The two technology companies in April finalised a deal to team up in the smartphone market as they try to fight back against the dominance of devices such as Apple’s iPhone and those running on Google’s Android.

Andy Lees, president of Microsoft’s Mobile Communication Business, demonstrated a preview of the next version of Windows Phone software, codenamed “Mango,” which he said would be available for free to Windows Phone 7 users this autumn and described as a major upgrade, launching the next chapter in Microsoft’s mobile phone ambitions.

Microsoft launched the Phone 7 operating system seven months ago in an attempt to catch up with features found on the iPhone and Android powered smartphones. But while Phone 7 has been well-received by reviewers, it has made little headway in the market in part because of the limited number of handsets on which it is available.

Microsoft has not disclosed how many Phone 7 handsets have been sold since its launch, but Gartner, the research group, estimates that about 1.6m Phone 7 smartphones were shipped in the first quarter. Microsoft’s share of the mobile phone market in the first quarter was just 3.6 per cent however, against 36 per cent for Android-powered handsets.

Phone 7 handsets are currently available from Samsung, LG, HTC and Dell. Mr Lees said the Mango upgrade to Phone 7 would also be available on handsets from Acer, ZTE and Fujitsu. Mr Lees said the partnership with Nokia was proceeding well.

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Source:http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/e5052474-8641-11e0-9e2c-00144feabdc0.html?ftcamp=rss#axzz1NKgugwnb

Wipro gets I-T scrutiny notice

May 24th, 2011

The country’s third-largest software exporter Wipro on Monday said it has got a scrutiny notice from the Income Tax department for the assessment year 2008-09.

“As a part of regular assessment proceedings for assessment year 2008-09, we have received a notice from the Tax Officer seeking details,” the company said in a statement.

Though Wipro did not provide details of the notice, it said the company is subject to scrutiny assessment proceedings “every year”.

“We are confident that we would be able to clarify by furnishing appropriate information, as we have done in the past years,” Wipro said.

Earlier this year, Wipro’s rival Infosys was too had received a I-T notice demanding about Rs 450 crore in tax for wrongfully claiming tax exemption on onshore services by declaring them as software exports.

Onshore software development is the practice wherein Indian companies send their software engineers on short assignments (3-6 months) to companies based in Europe, the US, and other nations.

The government had contended revenue from software development activity and technical manpower deputed abroad are not considered as export income eligible for deduction under 10A/10B/10AA of the Income-Tax Act, 1961.

The government had said that Infosys had claimed the revenues generated from onshore software development activities and deputation of technical manpower abroad as related to business activities conducted out of its Software Technology Park and Special Economic Zone units in India as eligible for income-tax deduction.

Infosys, Wipro and many other software export firms claimed tax benefits for software export income under Section 10A of the Income Tax Act. The scheme ended in March this year.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Wipro-gets-I-T-scrutiny-notice/articleshow/8535254.cms

Software AG snaps up Terracotta to secure in-memory portfolio

May 24th, 2011

Software AG has reached a deal to buy Java in-memory specialist Terracotta, and hopes to use the company’s technology to compete with SAP and others in cloud and analysis operations.

Software AG intends to integrate Terracotta’s platform into its own offering to speed up data processing and allow the company to offer new PaaS services. Terracotta’s technology allows much faster data processing of cached data and is popular among in-memory developers.

“The integration of Terracotta’s technology with our product portfolio is a major step in ensuring that our customers can fully benefit from the convergence of cloud computing, the mobile web, complex event processing and real-time, multi-party collaboration through unprecedented levels of performance and scalability,” said Software AG chief technical officer Wolfram Jost.

“Software AG is also committed to fully supporting Terracotta’s open source Communities in further developing this next generation in-memory technology.”

Terracotta’s systems can download and process up to a terabyte of data in-memory, and so can run services up to a thousand times faster than those using a real-time connection to a datacentre for updates. Other companies are also making in-memory key to their strategies looking ahead, James Governor, senior analyst at Redmonk blogged.

“In-memory is scorching hot right now,” he said.

“Software AG’s German competitor SAP is all about In Memory database in the shape of its HANA architecture. But while HANA is about analytics, Terracotta is all about home-grown applications and scaling code.”

SAP has been making a major play for the in-memory market, telling V3.co.uk that the technology was key to the future of business analytics. The company has also linked up with HP to sell in-memory systems using its technology.

Meanwhile analysts have warned that Software AG has been positioning itself against SAP with a series of acquisitions, such as business process modelling company IDS Scheer.

“The combination of Software AG and Terracotta will provide enormous value to customers of both companies through a comprehensive software stack that supports the level of performance and scale required in private and public cloud infrastructures,” said Amit Pandey, chief executive of Terracotta.

Source:http://www.v3.co.uk/v3-uk/news/2073225/software-ag-snaps-terracotta-secure-memory-portfolio

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