Archive for June, 2011

Microsoft Challenges Itself in the Clouds

June 27th, 2011

Microsoft Corp. will introduce a cloud version of its Office applications this week, a move that ramps up the software giant’s competition not only with companies such as Google Inc. and VMware Inc. but with itself.

On Tuesday, Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer is scheduled to launch Office 365, a combination of communication, collaboration and productivity software delivered via the Internet. Microsoft, which is holding an event in New York to celebrate the debut, calls the suite of services the “next generation cloud service.”

Office 365 enters a crowded field. Google Docs from Google and VMware’s Zimbra email, for example, are attracting hundreds of companies seeking tools that work from desktop computers, smartphones or the growing number of tablet computers in use today.

Microsoft’s biggest competitor, however, might be itself. Nearly nine of every 10 office computers runs one of the 14 versions of Office the company has released since the software’s launch in 1989. The company now needs to convince those computer users, estimated at about one billion, to switch to Office in the cloud without disrupting the legacy version that is financing the transition.

It’s a changeover Microsoft has to make. More people want to be able to use mobile devices for work. That allows them to make any environment their office, but requires corporate IT departments to coordinate a growing array of hardware.

Cloud services are growing, in part, because they address this dynamic, providing the most cost-effective way to link all those gadgets.

Microsoft also sees profit in the cloud. The market for cloud-computing services and software is expected to grow more than 27% annually over the next five years and reach $73 billion by 2015, International Data Corp. projected last week.

Cloud computing, which uses networks of computers to store and deliver applications and content, will power a wave of technology expansion, says IDC’s vice president and chief analyst, Frank Gens.

Like the mainframe and personal computers before it, cloud software and services “are merging into the industry’s third major platform for long-term growth,” said Mr. Gens. He estimates that by 2015 one of every seven dollars spent on technology will be connected with cloud computing and “the winners of the cloud platform wars will likely be the new power brokers of the IT industry.”

Microsoft was the power broker in the PC era, but whether it’s able to get on top of the cloud will likely depend on what Mr. Ballmer introduces Tuesday.

Office 365 blends many existing Microsoft utilities, which currently are offered online à la carte, into a single cloud offering. In a major break with the packaged-software era, customers will be able to buy only what they need. A small company, for example, can subscribe to Office 365 for as little as $2 a month for each worker accessing email and little else. An enterprise user who needs the full suite of Office software will pay about $27 a month.

By comparison, the packaged version of Office 2010 for Home & Business retails for $210 at Amazon.com. Office 2010 Professional retails for $408.

Such metered pricing also eases the transition for users running older versions of Office on desktop systems, allowing them to get new features for their mobile devices without the cost of full conversion.

The pricing model also allows Microsoft to generate new recurring revenue from customers who are content with older software.

To sweeten the deal for its biggest clients, Microsoft earlier this year modified its agreements with its largest corporate customers that grant licenses to companies with thousands of users. The changes allow maximum flexibility to switch users from license use, which covers the use of software on company computers, to the cloud service. The feature could allow clients months of Office 365 usage free until their corporate agreements come up for renewal.

Like all cloud providers, Microsoft faces risks. That was evident one morning recently when some subscribers to current Microsoft online services in the Americas region experienced intermittent outages. Other companies, like Amazon, have experienced similar outages.

And while Microsoft has been adjusting its strategy, cloud pioneers such as San Francisco-based Salesforce.com Inc. and Seattle-based Amazon have forged ahead.

Salesforce.com has added a communication technology called Chatter to its service to allow clients to communicate within its sales management cloud service. Amazon’s Elastic Cloud has attracted enterprise customers because of its ability to scale up capacity to match peaks in client demand. And Microsoft’s biggest rival, Google, is encroaching on Microsoft’s core Office franchise with the spread-sheet and word-processing utilities within its Google Docs cloud service.

By 2015, IDC estimates that software-oriented cloud services will account for roughly three-quarters of all spending on public cloud services.

So even though Microsoft isn’t first to the party, the trend in cloud computing is leading to Microsoft’s strong suit—developing software.

The introduction of Office 365 may look

Source:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304231204576405563616351454.html

Worldwide ERM Software Sales Growing Fast in 2011

June 27th, 2011

This year has brought a lot of encouraging economic recovery news to the IT market, and here comes another bright spot. According to IDC, the worldwide enterprise resource management (ERM) applications market year-over-year revenue growth of 4.6 percent in the second half of 2010, and that trend is continuing into 2011.

It’s not unexpected that companies with money to spend would be looking to put it toward integrating disparate systems, which would hopefully free up more dollars for other projects in the long-term. The number of dollars predicted to pour into this market is a little surprising. IDC forecasts that global ERM application revenues will, for the first time, increase by more than $2 billion in 2011, achieving a total market size of $36.2 billion.

“In this post-recession business environment, companies are investing in automation for competitive advantage, and in tools to help them get closer to their customers, partners and suppliers,” said Michael Fauscette, group vice president for software business solutions at IDC. “While the overall ERM market should produce steady growth for some time, we expect spending to increase in vertical-specific applications, applications that increase social collaboration and community, mobile applications, and applications that facilitate both B2B (Business-to-Business) and B2C (Business-to-Consumer) commerce processes.”

The IDC tracker provides total market size and vendor share for the following technology areas:

* Financial accounting applications
* Human capital management
* Payroll accounting
* Procurement
* Order management
* Financial performance and strategy management applications
* Project and portfolio management (PPM)
* Enterprise asset management

A total of 351 vendors were included in the latest ERM tracker. The top five vendors–SAP, Oracle, Microsoft, Sage, and Intuit–earned more than $1 billion each in ERM software revenue during 2010. SAP held the top spot with 17 percent market share globally.

Only SAP, Oracle, and Microsoft managed to outperform the market in terms of growth. Additionally, SAP enjoyed double-digit growth performance in the enterprise asset management space, as did Oracle in the order management and procurement functional markets.

“While the overall ERM applications market is expected grow 5.9 percent in 2011, five out of its eight functional markets are poised to achieve above average market growth,” said Wilvin Chee, associate vice president for worldwide software trackers at IDC. “These are the human capital management, procurement, financial performance and strategy management applications, order management, and enterprise asset management markets.”

Additionally, the tracker covers six geographic regions with country-level data for 13 nations. Looking at the map, SAP earned over 20 percent growth in its Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) and Latin America regions, while Microsoft enjoyed double-digit growth rates in regions outside of North America and Western Europe. Among the top three vendors globally, Oracle experienced the best growth in the North America region.

In the largest country markets, double-digit growth is expected in Australia, Brazil, China, Russia, and India during 2011. In China, human capital management applications will be the top-performing market, while financial performance and strategy management will be the market leader in Brazil. In Australia, financial accounting applications will be the strongest ERM functional market. Project and portfolio management will be the key growth market in Russia, and order management applications are expected to produce the best growth this year in India.

Source:http://www.itjungle.com/tfh/tfh062711-story08.html

Full Data Traffic Control for Symbian with SPB Wireless Monitor

June 24th, 2011

SPB Software a leading mobile software developer announces the release of SPB Wireless Monitor for Symbian – the first and unique solution for Symbian devices that measures data traffic per application via all types of Internet connections and calculates network usage costs according to the current data plan.

Now Symbian users can fully enjoy all the capabilities of their devices without thinking of the consequences of the unlimited data usage. It’s SPB Wireless Monitor that will control mobile data spending and will unmask the biggest traffic-consumers. From now on it is possible to prevent the unforeseen expenses and unwanted mobile charges by tracking each and every application the money is being spent on.

SPB Wireless Monitor measures data traffic, calculates network charges according to the currently used tariff, sends warnings of costly data usage, and reports the specific data traffic each application generates. Daily, monthly, yearly or custom period cost reports help to avoid the unrestrained money spending. The solution supports various types of connection (CDMA, GPRS, 3G, and Wi-Fi) and provides users with the report on traffic per application allowing them to track the applications that are the most data consuming.

The more applications are downloaded the harder it is to control expenses on mobile internet. SPB Wireless Monitor becomes the perfect solution for the mobile market that helps end users to limit the apps choice to the most cost effective and prevents money losses for mobile operators. SPB Wireless Monitor is also available on Android and Windows Mobile smartphones.

Source:http://news.thomasnet.com/fullstory/Mobile-Device-Software-provides-full-data-traffic-reporting-598047

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