Archive for June, 2011

IBM Accelerates Social Business Initiative with New Software

June 21st, 2011

IBM today announced an expansion of its software portfolio to help organizations embrace the power of social business. As part of today’s news IBM is delivering IBM Connections, the industry’s first social networking platform with real-time compliance capabilities.

The new IBM Connections software allows organizations to track and trace data on the fly throughout their organizations. This information can be analyzed and is discoverable in real-time using the IBM Connections active compliance service versus waiting until day end for analysis.
The adoption of social software is on the rise and rapidly becoming a vital business tool, enabling organizations to transform virtually every part of their business operations from marketing, customer service and sales, to product development and human resources. The market opportunity for social platforms is expected to grow by a factor of nearly two billion worldwide by 2014, according to IDC*.
Organizations, both in regulated industries and those beginning to experiment with social technology, inevitably have questions about security and compliance. A growing challenge for global organizations is the ability to manage risk while harnessing insights from a wide variety of social communities and remaining compliant with their own governance policies, including practices dictated by their regulatory requirements.
Gartner recently said that “by the end of 2013, half of all companies will be forced to produce material from social media websites for e-discovery so enterprises need an overall governance strategy for all applications and information.”
The new IBM Connections 3.01 software uses microblogs, wikis, communities and activities to collaborate with clients, partners and employees.
The social networking platform delivers enterprise-quality compliance capabilities providing the ability to monitor, track and quickly pull out relevant data around conversations, posts and file uploads in real-time. This electronic trail of online interactions helps organizations meet their policy needs while working at the speed of social networking.
IBM plans to provide these industry agnostic compliance capabilities for clients through a collaboration with Actiance, a leader in compliance capabilities. In the third quarter, IBM is expected to introduce Actiance Vantage for IBM Connections, which archives and logs social content to help enterprises remain compliant with corporate and government regulations. Actiance software is used by nine of the top 10 U.S. banks and more than 1,600 organizations globally for the security, management and compliance of unified communications, Web 2.0 and social media channels.
The new features within IBM Connections also help foster greater participation in communities through moderation allowing managers and editors of online content to review materials before they are published, a critical step in compliance governance practices. To help organizations take advantage of the social business opportunity, IBM Connections also features social analytics to help users find experts and the ability to comment or vote on ideas in a community. The Connections Ideation Blog is designed to allow crowdsourcing of ideas across teams and customers.
“The benefits of social business are too great to ignore,” said Alistair Rennie, general manager, collaboration solutions, IBM. “With these new advancements around compliance enablement, a social business can confidently activate networks of people to use a variety of collaborative tools, to improve and accelerate innovation.”
The new software is part of IBM’s industry leading collaboration solutions portfolio. Once again, IDC named IBM the worldwide market share leader in the social platform software segment, based on total worldwide revenue for 2010.

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/ibm-accelerates-social-business-initiative-with-new-software-2011-06-21?reflink=MW_news_stmp

Cisco Makes Quad Social Software a Hosted Service

June 21st, 2011

Cisco Systems is now offering its Quad enterprise collaboration platform as a hosted or managed service and is bringing in some partners to help with the effort.

At the Enterprise 2.0 show in Boston June 20, Cisco officials rolled out a number of announcements around its year-old Quad offering, including the upcoming release of Quad 2.5 which will include tight integration with a host of content management and instant messaging platforms from the likes of IBM, EMC and Microsoft, and a mobile application for their Cius enterprise tablet.

At the heart of the news is the new deployment models for Quad, and the partnerships Cisco will leverage to make them happen. Moving Quad to hosted and managed service models makes sense, but Cisco can’t do it alone, Murali Sitaram, vice president and general manager of the company’s Collaboration Software Group, said during a press and analyst briefing via TelePresence and WebEx before the announcement.

“We needed the skills of others to get this out,” Sitaram said.

ACS, the services arm of Xerox, will be the first company to offer the Quad hosted and managed service in the United States and Canada, with Logicalis being the partner in the Europe and Alphawest in Australia. In addition, Cisco is partnering with consulting firm Capgemini to work with customers in their deployment of Quad, including defining use cases and goals for social collaboration, implementing the technology in their environments and ensuring the technology is getting the best use.

IDC analyst Erin Traudt said Cisco’s decision to partner with the likes of ACS and Capgemini makes a lot of sense as the networking giant looks to grow its offering in the hosted and managed services arena. Traudt also pointed out that there is a vertical element to what Cisco is doing with Quad, which she said will help customers more easily adapt the social collaboration software to their specific businesses. That’s an important step given that businesses in different areas will have different workflows, processes and lingo.

With a greater vertical emphasis in the social software, “you’re talking the same language at that point,” Traudt said in an interview with eWEEK.

Cisco officials first introduced Quad in June 2010, looking to give businesses the same communications features found in such social media environments as Facebook and MySpace—including profiles, updates, video communications, Twitter-like microblogging, people searches and auto-tagging—that employees use in their personal lives.

The partnerships and integration features in Quad 2.5 extend the ways businesses can use the technology, officials said. It also will enable companies that might not have been able to deploy Quad within their businesses a new model to consider. He said companies with 1,000 or more employees would find the hosted and managed services most beneficial.

ACS will offer access to Quad through a number of public and private cloud scenarios. ACS runs 16 data centers worldwide, and offers more than 57,000 MIPs of mainframe power and 30,000-plus servers, many of them managed remotely, according to Nagesh Kunamneni, CTO of ACS’ ITO Strategy & Service Management unit. Having Quad as a hosted and managed service will make the software more accessible, he said.

“We’re seeing a huge trend toward mobility,” Kunamneni said during the press briefing. “Ubiquitous access to the service is becoming key.”

Within Quad 2.5, Cisco is offering a better way to define and improve the relevance of content users get from their professional networks, and supports attachments and multimedia within the micro-blogging capabilities. The software also will proactively make recommendations—such as people to follow or communities to join—that are based on the user’s activities or those of the people within the user’s network. Quad also is available on a number of mobile devices. There already was an application for Apple’s iPhone and iPad, and now there’s one for Cisco’s Android-based Cius.

Quad 2.5 also offers pre-built integration with EMC Documentum and Microsoft SharePoint 2007 content management platforms, as well as with IBM’s Sametime 8.5.1 and Cisco Jabber instant messaging technologies.

Source:http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Messaging-and-Collaboration/Cisco-Makes-Quad-Social-Software-a-Hosted-Service-248470/

Software Problems Plague Samsung’s New Galaxy Tab

June 21st, 2011

Samsung Electronics’ galaxy is being turned upside down as pundits drool over its latest tablet PC, the Galaxy Tab 10.1, and herald it as the only serious threat to Apple’s iPad 2, while critics lambaste the product’s dysfunctional operating system.

The Galaxy Tab got off to a great start on June 8 when it was unveiled in New York City, with 200 people lining up outside stores to check out its arsenal of weapons and see whether it could live up its creator’s promises. Samsung claims the tablet is lighter than the iPad 2, with a faster processing speed and longer battery life, but some critics have disputed the efficacy of the battery.

CNET was sufficiently impressed to cite the product as the potential prince waiting in the wings to dethrone Apple. Business Insider flagged its arrival with the description, “brilliant hardware that’s on par with the iPad 2,” but conceded that its Honeycomb operating system was “still a wreck.”

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal commented that, as the two rival tablets come with similar price tags, the Galaxy loses out because “its selection of fewer apps and weaker battery life put it at a disadvantage.”

The key stumbling block to the product’s success is proving to be Google’s Android system and its stodgy user interface, which Business Insider described as being “a pain to navigate.” “The Android Market is a mess,” it said when reviewing the product. “Honeycomb is the only thing holding Android-based tablets back.”

PC World wrote that it was nigh-on impossible to find a useful app among the several thousand available for the Galaxy Tab 10.1. In contrast, the iPad2 offers consumers a plethora of choices among its 90,000 apps.

Samsung hit back by reassuring consumers and pundits that the shortcomings of the OS will be resolved in the coming months. It stressed that the Galaxy Tab 10.1 has only just hit the market and that, as such, a shortage of apps is inevitable at first.

“The Galaxy S was criticized for its lack of apps when it first hit stores, but we had almost made up the difference within one year,” said a Samsung spokesman. “We should be able to catch up with the iPad soon because we are procuring apps by forming alliances directly with developers.”

Apple has had over 12 months to build up its army of apps since the original iPad hit the market in April last year and has so far sold some 26 million units. The iPad 2 was first released in March of 2011, but it arrived in Korea at the end of April.

Samsung said it is now working with Google, which distributes its Android OS free of charge, to iron out all the kinks. The Korean electronics giant cannot fix the problems itself as it was not involved in developing the system in the first place.

“We are cooperating fully with Google to improve the OS. All of the problems being cited right now should be fixed within this year,” the Samsung spokesman said.

Source:http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2011/06/21/2011062100766.html

Apple’s SaaS: Software as a Soul

June 21st, 2011

Over the weekend, The New York Times ran a piece entitled Lessons in Longevity, From IBM. In it, author Steve Lohr looks back at the past 100 years of IBM and points out the keys to their longevity: shifting and adapting to new markets and times. He then lays how three tech powers today — Microsoft, Google, and Apple — may make similar moves to weather the inevitable storms.

At a high level, the parallels make some sense for Microsoft, and to a lesser extent, Google. They make no sense for Apple.

Microsoft and Google, as Lohr points out, are hugely successful companies right now. But their businesses have potential points of weakness because almost all of their money comes from one or two areas. In Google’s case, the one area is search advertising. In Microsoft’s, it’s Windows and Office (the Server division makes a good amount of money, as Lohr notes, but it’s peanuts compared to the two towers).

Lohr says that Microsoft up-and-coming gaming division could eventually be a key to saving them. And for Google, it could be Android. Again, this all makes sense (though is hardly anything new).

But when it comes to Apple, Lohr loses it. First of all, Lohr talks about IBM’s near-failure in the 1990s, but completely leaves out the fact that Apple too almost went under in the same time frame. In fact, they were much closer to death. Then Steve Jobs came back and — we all know the story.

The key is that Apple, as successful as they are right now, has already had to reinvent themselves. And they did it with stunning success. In fact, their reinvention has been more successful than IBM’s most recent reinvention. It’s just that Apple is not 100 years old. Nor is their metamorphosis something that any other company in the tech world (and perhaps beyond) is likely to be able to replicate anytime soon. And in fact, Apple’s metamorphosis is still ongoing.

And that leads to point two.

In remarking on the same article earlier today, Daring Fireball’s John Gruber tears into Lohr’s assertion that Apple’s hardware business could be easily “mimicked”. Specifically, he questions if Michael A. Cusumano, a professor at MIT that Lohr cites, understands Apple at all when he suggests that Apple in the future will have to shift to software and services to stay alive.

“I wonder if the professor thinks companies like, say, Rolex and BMW ought to shift to ‘software and services’ too?,” Gruber writes. He also notes that while Lohr brings up how Macs are still dwarfed in sheer unit sales by Windows PCs, Lohr completely disregards the fact that Apple is now in command in terms of profit share amongst PC-makers.

This is something which, comically, is almost always overlooked — even though it’s entirely deliberate on Apple’s part.

I also think that Lohr and Cusumano completely disregard something else important: innovation. As in, while it’s certainly possible that “Apple’s product designs, however impressive, will eventually be mimicked and come under price pressure,” as Cusumano suggests, that seems to be assuming Apple stands still and stops innovating in the areas of hardware design and manufacturing. That’s ridiculous.

I’ve been buying Apple products for just about ten years now (yes, that’s all). In that entire time, I’ve yet to see a product by a competitor that matches the build quality and aesthetic of Apple’s products in their major areas of focus (Macs, iPods, iPhones, and now iPads). Not once.

I know that sounds like just about the biggest fanboy thing to say… well, ever. But am I wrong? Even Apple haters cannot deny the quality of the products. Bitch about price, bitch about control, bitch about the fruit logo — but quality is simply never a compelling argument. Because Apple wins.

That hasn’t changed for at least a decade, and some would argue much longer. Why is it going to change all of a sudden? Because the manufacturing and designing processes will get cheaper? Sure. For shit products.

Competitors have been trying to mimic the look and feel of Apple’s products for much of this past decade. Guess what happens? They always come up short. We’re left with a ton of products that sort of, kind of look like Apple products, but never feel right. They feel like cheap knockoffs. Which is exactly what they are.

That’s part of the reason why I think Apple’s lawsuit against Samsung is silly. Is Samsung trying to mimic Apple’s products? Of course they are. Basically everyone is. But I’ve used a handful of the products Apple names in the lawsuit. And, well, a quote comes to mind.

“Senator, I served with Jack Kennedy, I knew Jack Kennedy, Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you’re no Jack Kennedy.”

If Apple fired their design teams and kicked Jonathan Ive to the curb, then sure, maybe in a decade competitors would be able to mimic Apple’s current designs and build-quality at a lower price that would threaten Apple. But that’s not going to happen. At least not anytime soon. And to not even bring up that fact is a slap in the face of what Apple has done in terms of manufacturing innovation and industrial design. Believe it or not, these things are an extremely important part of what makes Apple, Apple.

And none of that speaks to the astounding success Apple has had managing their supply chains. Again, there are good reasons that competitors aren’t able to copy Apple so easily. Under COO Tim Cook, Apple today is perhaps the most well-oiled machine the tech industry has never seen.

And there’s more.

In his WWDC keynote a few weeks ago, Steve Jobs said the following. “You know, if the hardware is the brain and the sinew of our products, the software in them is their soul.”

Obviously, he said this because WWDC this year was entirely about software with the unveilings of OS X Lion, iOS 5, and iCloud. But he also said for a much more important reason: Apple actually believes this.

Even though they make the vast majority of their money from selling hardware, without software, their great-looking machines would be absolutely worthless. Sure, you could jerry-rig them to run Windows, but then they would just be really expensive PCs. Apple doesn’t sell only hardware or only software — they sell the entire package. They sell the experience.

This is what the vast majority of their competitors do not understand. By outsourcing their “souls”, as it were, to Microsoft for PCs or to Google for phones, they can never do what Apple does.

One big exception may be HP. Despite their denials that they’re in the process of transforming their own business to be more like Apple’s, they are well, transforming their business to be more like Apple’s. With webOS now in place, they control the software (at least outside of PCs for now — but soon those too) and the hardware (not Apple-level yet, but you can be sure they’re working on it). Will that transformation work? Maybe. Maybe not. But give them credit for trying. At the very least, they seem to get it.

So when Lohr and Cusumano suggest that Apple may one day survive as a company that relies on software like iCloud to milk money-making opportunities out of things like advertising and marketing, you have to laugh. If anything, more companies are going to attempt to alter their models to be more like Apple’s, instead of the other way around.

Apple will remain in a position of power for the foreseeable future because they have nailed that model. And it is not nearly as easily assailable as the NYT piece suggests.

At the same time, Apple will continue to innovate, and yes, transform themselves. Most of their revenues now come from phones. Ten years ago, that was unthinkable. In another ten years, most of their revenue could come from tablet computers. Or maybe something else no one is thinking about right now.

Apple certainly won’t be becoming a “software and services” company anytime soon. They follow the “SaaS” model — that is, “Software as a Soul”. As in, the software cannot be decoupled from the hardware. They tried that once before. It was a disaster. It led to the near-collapse and subsequently, the complete reinvention that we’re seeing now.

They won’t have to “pull an IBM” because they’re already doing it one better.

Source:http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/apples-saas-software-as-a-soul/2011/06/21/AGAfPsdH_story.html

Adobe Software Updates To Help Devs Build iOS, PlayBook And Android Apps

June 20th, 2011

Adobe is today pushing updates to its application development software product Flash Builder and the open source Flex framework to enable developers to build apps for iPhone, iPad and BlackBerry PlayBook, following support for the Android platform (added last April).

Developers can now opt to use Adobe’s platform to build apps that work across the Web, the desktop and a range of tablets and smartphones, with the ability to reuse most or all of their existing code and use common logic across all platforms.

The new version of Flash Builder (4.5) and Flex (also 4.5) are offered as stand-alone products or as part of Creative Suite 5.5 Web Premium and Master Collection. Also, Flash Builder 4.5 for PHP today supports mobile application development for Android, BlackBerry PlayBook and iOS.

The release of the software updates accompanies the company’s announcement of the Adobe Digital Enterprise Platform, which it bills as an “open, standards-based platform for delivering engaging digital solutions across social, Web, mobile, and print channels”.

Using the new Flash Builder, developers can create Flex and ActionScript applications and deploy them using Adobe AIR software, which Adobe reckons will be supported by over 200 million mobile devices by the end of this year. Needless to say, this is a way for developers to work around Apple’s no-Flash restrictions when it comes to building apps for iOS devices.

Last week, the company released the Adobe AIR 2.7 SDK and runtimes. Notably, Adobe at the time of the release said it would be dropped support for Linux to focus on mobile platforms.

Flash Builder 4.5 Standard will set you back $249, while the premium version of the product costs $699 – upgrade pricing for Flash Builder 4.5 is $49.

Flex 4.5 is available as a free open source framework.

Source:http://techcrunch.com/2011/06/20/adobe-software-updates-to-help-devs-build-ios-playbook-and-android-apps/

China’s software industry faces tectonic shift

June 20th, 2011

The golden age for the software and outsourcing industry is over, and Chinese companies must overcome a number of hurdles as they face a major shift as the industry goes from selling software products to selling services.

IT heavyweights made this call during a just concluded international software conference in the northeast port city of Dalian, Liaoning Province.

Liu Jiren, chairman and CEO of Neusoft Corp, said costs in the IT sector have been growing at least 10 percent annually for the past couple of years, and such increases are difficult for overseas customers to bear.

But Michael Ye, vice president of Dalian Software Park Ltd (DLSP), believes the sector’s primary challenge isn’t rising costs but overcapacity from too many local governments competing with each other to establish software and outsourcing industries.

“All the governments flock to these multinationals to try to win investment,” he said, as they think setting up IT services and a software industry is a good way to attract international investment.

And Ye anticipates this competition will become more severe due to local governments’ perception that their “political performance” is based on them attracting foreign investment.

Chongqing is one of a number of cities in China rushing to turn itself into an IT hub. Construction of the largest cloud-computing zone in China started in April with investments totaling around 50 billion yuan (7.73 billion U.S. dollars), according to the municipality’s government.

Yet the game of outsourcing, shared services and offshoring is not about today, it’s long term, said Egidio Zarrella, KPMG partner and IT advisor, last month in Beijing. “China’s focus on education, infrastructure and high quality means it’s well placed for the future,” said Zarrella in his speech at a shared services and outsourcing conference.

But Ye sees market forces rather than government investment as the key.

“The market will decide who will survive the competition, gradually the market will decide which areas, or which cities, are suitable for developing that industry,” he said.

Ye said that quite a few municipal governments nationwide have approached DLSP in an attempt to copy its model, which is government supported but privately invested.

By the end of 2009, DLSP had realized an annual sales income of 20.2 billion yuan and had attracted Fortune 500 companies such as IBM, HP Accenture, Panasonic, Sony, Oracle and NEC, according to the company.

“They all expect us to help them attract Fortune 500 companies, but we can’t make this promise,” Ye said.

He said it’s one thing to establish a software park, but quite another to make it a success, which must be based on a number of factors, such as whether the city has a sufficient number of quality universities, and whether the government applies a market-oriented management approach.

“I don’t think our story can simply be replicated in other cities, and I suggest the local governments give it a second thought before deciding to build such parks,” he said.

Source:http://onlysoftwareblog.com/wp-admin/edit.php?s=China%27s+software+industry+faces+tectonic+shift&post_status=all&mode=list

Google Buying DVR Software Maker SageTV

June 20th, 2011

Google (NSDQ: GOOG) has acquired nine-year-old DVR software company SageTV, in a move apparently designed to enhance its Google TV products.

Sage makes software which turns computers with TV tuners in to DVRs. Though unstated, an observer might speculate Google’s intention is inject Google TV with the ability to record shows from broadcast TV – a prospect nevertheless considered unlikely by the founder of one of Sage’s competitors and by GigaOm.

SageTV’s website reads: “Since 2002, we’ve worked to change the TV viewing experience by building cutting-edge software and technology that allows you to create and control your media center from multiple devices. And as the media landscape continues to evolve, we think it’s time our vision of entertainment management grows as well. By teaming up with Google, we believe our ideas will reach an even larger audience of users worldwide on many different products, platforms and services.

“We’ve seen how Google’s developer efforts are designed to stimulate innovation across the web, and as developers have played a core role in the success of SageTV, we think our shared vision for open technology will help us advance the online entertainment experience. We look forward to joining Google, and while we don’t have anything specific to announce at this time, we encourage interested developers to email.”

Source:http://paidcontent.org/article/419-google-buying-dvr-software-maker-sagetv/

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