Wednesday, May 30, 2007
SaaS
Ramana Mulpury writes: "A few years ago, if you asked anyone at an emerging software company whether ASP/SaaS/On-Demand (referred to as ASP) solutions were for real, you would probably get a 50/50 response. Over the last year or so, I’ve been seeing a completely different scale of adoption of ASP solutions. This scale of adoption can only mean one thing – SaaS is here to stay. Not only that, small, mid-sized businesses, departments of large enterprises, and to some extent entire enterprises, are clearly embracing ASP solutions today."
Monday, May 21, 2007
Enterprise Software Mirroring Home Usage
Barrons's writes: "Ted Schlein was making the point that enterprise software will increasingly look like what consumers do at home. He notes that the two enterprise applications he uses the most are e-mail and Google. “Look for examples of software that mimic what consumers do at home and do it within the enterprise,” he says. “Corporate directories of the future will look like MySpace.” College grads of the future, he says, are not going to want to use the dull enterprise applications now is use."
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Community 2.0
John Hagel writes about communities, ten years after he wrote "Net Gain."
In reflecting on the experiences accumulated to date by companies seeking to build virtual communities, I’d like to focus on four challenges:
1. Language
2. Integrating diverse skill sets
3. Shifting mindsets
4. Organizational barriers
...
Companies need virtual communities in order to successfully respond to growing pressure on performance coming from two directions simultaneously – customers and talent.
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
SAP and SaaS
ZDNet writes:
[Hasso] Plattner's description of the next-generation, on demand business suite was similar in many ways to what salesforce.com has developed over the last eight years with its applications, platform and ecosystem, and what PeopleSoft founder Dave Duffield is creating at Workday.
SAP is late to the on demand game, but has been working over the last three years on A1S to catch up. Plattner said that SAP's A1S on demand offering will be broader than salesforce.com or Workday, covering the entire business suite and different industries. In that context it sounds closer to NetSuite in covering the entire spectrum of core business applications, but SAP has the advantage of deep expertise across industry verticals, a set of more than 2000 enterprise services and a large war chest for marketing the products and services. Plattner views SAP's role as spawning an ecosystem of innovation and serving as the primary trusted partner to customers.
Monday, May 14, 2007
Software 2007
Tali Aben writes about the recently concluded conference:
SAP: Hasso Plattner’s key message: not only small companies can innovate. As he presented SAP’s new offering for SMB’s, what I heard was not “innovation” but rather “catch-up”. Sorry… however, it’s still impressive (since often, large companies can’t do that either), but SOA, On-Demand, Collaboration, Community, Standards, etc. are themes we’ve been hearing about for quite some time.
...
SalesForce.com: Marc Benioff is a great presenter. During his session, I kept thinking of my Israeli entrepreneurs… why can’t they speak like him! He reminded all of us that SalesForce.com was a catalyst for change in the software industry. Very true. Initially, the users were SMB’s, but now, that’s not the case anymore. Marc then went to pitch a new platform that will allow anybody to create and then run new applications on top of this platform, empowering users and ISV’s to build next generation apps. This company is moving beyond just being a single application, to providing a platform, with multiple applications. Sounds like a familiar strategy…. perhaps, they should rethink the name of the company
Friday, March 2, 2007
Web-based Collaboration Tools
Forbes writes about nine such tools, and adds a cautionary note: "Bear in mind before you jump in that you're giving information to a third-party company to store. If you're not in IT, you should talk to the IT department to be sure you're not violating company policy by using these services. And, even if you're in IT, before you use these services, you should talk to your company's legal and compliance offices to be sure you're obeying the law and regulations with regard to managing company's information."
Friday, February 23, 2007
Google Apps
The New York Times writes:
On Thursday, Google, the Internet search giant, will unveil a package of communications and productivity software aimed at businesses, which overwhelmingly rely on Microsoft products for those functions.
The package, called Google Apps, combines two sets of previously available software bundles. One included programs for e-mail, instant messaging, calendars and Web page creation; the other, called Docs and Spreadsheets, included programs to read and edit documents created with Microsoft Word and Excel, the mainstays of Microsoft Office, an $11 billion annual franchise.
...
The e-mail and messaging package, which is based on products like Gmail, Google’s e-mail service, has been available in a free trial since August and is supported by advertising. It has been used by thousands of businesses, educational institutions and other organizations, Google said.
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
SaaS Opportunity
Sramana Mitra writes:
Last Fall, I wrote a widely read piece called Venture Capital in India, in which I pegged the Indian venture boom to be largely in Real Estate, Retail, and to an extent in Consumer Internet, not much in actual technology.
Last week, Sujai Karampuri made a well researched case for technology product companies in India.
In the recently concluded Philippe Courtot interview series, we discussed at length the various ways in which India and China could undercut US companies, and Philippe acknowledged that in his business (Qualys is an outsourced managed security service provider, a SaaS play), it is quite possible that an Indian company could come up with a vastly lower cost structure, and customers would switch immediately, if they are convinced about the reliability of the service.
Just to set the economics in perspective, Qualys has invested $65 Million to build an infrastructure that "is at the scale of the planet" to monitor, audit and report network security problems.
Let me throw a challenge in the direction of the Indian entrepreneurs: Go figure out how to build this same business for $30 Million, and I can tell you, you will have an absolute winner in your hands.
ps. You can read the Courtot interview here:
[Part 1]
[Part 2]
[Part 3]
[Part 4]
[Part 5]
[Part 6]
[Part 7]
[Part 8]
[Part 9]
[Part 10]
[Part 11]
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Social Enterprise
Bambi Francisco discusses the future of the workplace in the context of the MySpace generation:
I imagine that this college student's future corporate life will be as Web 2.0 as his consumer life is now -- an egalitarian world in which everyone contributes, opines, votes, connects, shares and collaborates instantly.
For instance, by the time he starts receiving corporate memos, he may feel it's his right to immediately post a comment or edit every one he reads, even if it's an internal memo to employees from his CEO. He may also think that he has a say in voting on whether the memo should receive a thumbs up or thumbs down. Imagine a note to employees from future CEOs with links at the bottom that says "comments" and "ratings," and, dare I say, "edit." Talk about making higher-ups feel accountable, and out of control.
Tuesday, February 6, 2007
Need for SaaS Platform
Will Price writes:
One can only hope some form of platform infrastructure emerges to accelerate SaaS companies development. If not, the merits of SaaS will be challenged by the time, capital intensity, and delayed profitability of the model. Platform companies – Powersoft/Sybase, ORCL, MSFT – drove down the costs of building client/server application companies. The industry needs the SaaS analogs to unleash the power of the model at the cost optimal level.
A simple analysis holds that Fixed Costs/Gross Margin = breakeven revenue. While for SaaS this is a somewhat circular calculation (as in SaaS fixed costs are amortized into COGS), the rise of platforms will drive down fixed and allow SaaS companies to reduce capital required to get to scale. Fixed costs must be reduced in order to unleash the full power of the model and the rise of platforms will reduce the bespoke investments historically required to build SaaS companies.
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
Enterprise MVNO
Daniel Taylor writes about the requirements:
* Improved, enterprise-class help desk and customer support.
* Separation of business and personal liability on mobile devices used in work environments.
* The current inability of IT departments to actively manage mobile users.
* The breakdown of the user/payer model in enabling IT enforcement of corporate mobility policies.
* The cost of international roaming.
* The lack of integration between carrier services for voice and data, even for services delivered to a single device.
* The lack of integration between carrier and enterprise networks for mobile applications.
* The limit of behind-the-firewall connectivity to only a handful of mobile users.
Thursday, January 11, 2007
Offshore Outsourcing Predictions
Sadagopan writes:
1. Offshore majors would work on coming out with a viable approach towards offerings centered on disruptive technologies like SaaS. Global majors may work hard to demonstrate better value add to their customers leveraging their offshore presence.
2. New breed of offshoring players with different business models shall spring up. Innovation in services space would continue to come out of India.
3. We may further see change in the rankings and growth rates amongst the top 10 offshore players change based on their business models and their organizational strengths. The era of an almost automatic growth is giving way to more deterministic models of growth pursued with deliberation and delivered effectively.
4. The threat to the offshoring services industry would be coming in form the IT infrastructure utilities - though this may be few years away. We may see some pioneering efforts by a few business units in adopting these and may also see offshore providers coming up with hybrid approaches to adopting to IT utilities(as part of their evolution)
Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Enterprise 2.0 Predictions
From the list of 2007 predictions by Dion Hinchcliffe:
Not a dent will be made in 2007 in the installed base of pre-existing collaborative tools such as e-mail, telephone, and IM. But the groundwork will be laid for a noticeable shift in 2008 as managers and workers discover the advantages of increased corporate knowledge retention, far better location of relevant business information, and emergent structure in terms of tagging and linking. And I suspect that tools that integrate e-mail, telephone, and IM into Enterprise 2.0 environments will see the biggest early success.
...
Enterprise 2.0 and Office 2.0 will face off as leading new terms for online business software and no one will win. Enterprise 2.0 is a broad a term that — with it's automatic association with organization-scale back-end systems — will struggle to maintain it's particular niche in freeform, emergent, social software tools for knowledge managements. Office 2.0 is a nice sized umbrella but tends to refer too much to the client-side aspect and not enough on the back office side. Will they merge or just remain convenient short-hand that evolves through next year? The label debate is important because we need effective short-hand labels to identify the fast moving trends in our industry and for now my vote is with the latter trend.
Tuesday, January 9, 2007
Enterprise IT
[via Sadagopan] Robert Metcalfe says: "From my point of view, there's little new in IT, particularly in enterprise software. Video might take Computerworld readers by surprise. There are three major forces - video, mobility and embedded - all three of which are nipping at the edge of IT. Video burdens IP networks, and they haven't quite seen the value proposition, but CIOs will eventually have to embrace it instead of fighting it. For mobility, the platform of choice is increasingly cell phones and less desktops. Cell phones are now a platform for enterprise applications. Embedded software, such as RFID, hasn't quite made it yet. To make enterprise applications more aware of inventory or the supply chain through RFID and sensor networks - of the three things, this is the furthest away from impacting CIOs."
Monday, January 8, 2007
Video for Business
WSJ writes:
Non-media companies, until recently, had been relative laggards in the video field. But that's changing rapidly, driven less by the desire to entertain than to deliver corporate messages more effectively via their Web sites.
...
"Corporations are just beginning to see [online video] as a real option to help cut costs and communicate," says Colin Dixon, a research analyst for Diffusion Group, a research firm. "Just from last year to this year, there's been a significant jump."
The rise partly reflects the work of small companies such as the FeedRoom Inc., Reflect Systems Inc. and VitalStream Inc., which offer services and technology that make it easier for companies to hop on the online-video bandwagon.
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Indian IT Consulting Firms
[via Sadagopan] Forbes writes in a story entitled "Consultants from Chennai": "The top five Indian players in consulting (Tata, Infosys, Wipro, Satyam and HCL Technologies) have averaged 30% revenue growth this year, while the largest U.S. players have averaged just 4%, according to Datamonitor senior analyst Patrick O'Brien. The Indian firms see consulting work as a way to maintain their competitive edge in the face of wage inflation in India and the rise of Chinese data processing firms. The labor arbitrage is not what it used to be. Wages for project managers in India have increased 23% per year from 2000 to 2004, while salaries for programmers have increased at a 13% pace, according to the McKinsey Global Institute."
Enterprise 2.0 in 2006
Dion Hinchcliffe writes:
Enterprise 2.0 describes the use of the latest freeform, emergent, social software tools that hold the promise to significantly improve the ways that we work together and collaborate. As an example, the liberal use of internal blogs and wikis with discoverable content frequently forms the foundation of an Enterprise 2.0 software strategy.
...
All in all, it's been a wind-up year for Enterprise 2.0 and 2007 will likely prove the year that IT departments really get their hands on the tools, find out what works and what doesn't (yes, letting the right mix of features and technologies emerge naturally), and for the first well-run case studies to report their results. But you can count on some continued controversy, particularly if there are any high-profile failures of Enterprise 2.0 rollouts, which instead of outright technology failure are at high risk for governance issues of various kinds.
Thursday, December 7, 2006
SaaS Future
Phil Wainewright writes:
Aggregation, integration, mashup platforms and ecosystems are going to be hot topics in software-as-a-service circles next year, according to a group of vendor CEOs who sat on a panel at the SIIA's OnDemand Summit in San Jose. I was intrigued to hear how much unanimity there was in their responses when asked to predict the most notable trends looking just six months out. They are obviously all thinking about how to link up their offerings with other vendors', and what the risks and opportunities might be for them.
One of the less obvious risks that surfaced is an interesting one. There's clearly a shared belief that integration will happen through some kind of hub — though no clear view as to whether that hub will be a platform, a marketplace or a customer-facing aggregator. The inherent risk here that vendors have to be wary of is the potential to become dependent on — and perhaps at the mercy of — an intermediary who takes control of the customer relationship. Several vendors were evidently alive to the flipside opportunity this represents of themselves becoming the hub that others depend on.
Friday, November 24, 2006
Enterprise 2.0
Andrew McAfee writes:
I met yesterday with David Deal, Ray Velez, and Amy Vickers from Avenue A | Razorfish, a 1000 person, $190 million interactive services firm headquartered in Seattle. AARF helps clients with digital marketing and advertising, with their customer-facing websites, and also with their Intranets and Extranets.
What I found most interesting about the company was its own Intranet. To hear David, Ray, and Amy tell it, the company's traditional static Intranet -- the place where an employee would go to look up benefits information or peruse the latest press releases -- still exists, but has been marginalized by a suite of Enterprise 2.0 tools.
Thursday, November 23, 2006
Enterprise RSS
InfoWorld writes:
RSS (really simple syndication) is a favored XML format for individuals to get information from sources such as news sites and blogs. In fact, a recent Pew Internet Foundation survey found nearly one in three individuals consumes RSS feeds. But for enterprises, the most telling response was that 63 percent of these RSS users subscribe to work-related feeds.
That latter finding shouldn’t surprise IT managers. After all, RSS readers are easy to install and use. This technology does a fine job helping workers cut through irrelevant information that floods portals, enterprise search results, and e-mail. But as RSS’s popularity rises, so do risks. For example, precious network bandwidth is consumed when many employees update the same feed. Plus, there are security risks associated with accessing inappropriate feeds.
To get around these issues and give more employees the benefit of RSS, organizations are adopting enterprise RSS solutions. I tested three hot products in this burgeoning area: Attensa Feed Server, NewsGator Enterprise Server, and KnowNow 3 Enterprise Syndication Solution.
Older Entries
Intel's SuiteTwo [Tuesday, November 14, 2006]
Knowledge from Emails [Wednesday, October 25, 2006]
Esther Dyson on Office 2.0 [Friday, October 20, 2006]
Teqlo [Monday, October 16, 2006]
Coghead [Saturday, October 14, 2006]
SAP's Software Platform [Wednesday, October 11, 2006]
Smart Tech Stories [Friday, September 29, 2006]
Office 2.0 [Tuesday, September 19, 2006]
Web Apps for Small Businesses [Tuesday, September 12, 2006]
Sun's Plans [Sunday, September 3, 2006]
Google's IT Strategy [Saturday, September 2, 2006]
Larry Ellison Interview [Monday, July 31, 2006]
Jotspot's Suite Plans [Thursday, July 27, 2006]
Smarter Authentication [Thursday, July 27, 2006]
Coghead [Friday, July 14, 2006]
Ray Lane on Web 2.0 [Thursday, June 15, 2006]
Enterprise Tech Startups [Thursday, May 25, 2006]
Software-as-a-Service [Monday, April 24, 2006]
Visible Path [Friday, April 21, 2006]
Oracle's Thinking [Wednesday, April 19, 2006]
SaaS Myths [Wednesday, April 19, 2006]
Coming Software Shakeout [Saturday, April 15, 2006]
SaaS Limits [Friday, April 14, 2006]
Red Hat and JBoss [Wednesday, April 12, 2006]
Software 2006 [Friday, April 7, 2006]
IDC's SaaS Predictions [Thursday, March 30, 2006]
Software as a Service [Wednesday, March 29, 2006]
SaaS Predictions [Friday, March 10, 2006]
BPM [Thursday, February 23, 2006]
CEO Dashboards [Tuesday, February 21, 2006]
Web 2.0 in the Enterprise [Monday, February 20, 2006]
Web 2.0 and the Enterprise [Tuesday, February 14, 2006]
BPM 2.0 [Saturday, February 4, 2006]
Managing Data [Thursday, January 19, 2006]
Salesforce.com's AppExchange [Thursday, January 19, 2006]
Web 3.0? [Wednesday, December 28, 2005]
IT and Business [Thursday, December 8, 2005]
Banks and Online Security [Tuesday, December 6, 2005]
InfoWorld 100 [Monday, November 28, 2005]
SaaS Business Models [Saturday, November 26, 2005]
On-Demand Update [Friday, November 25, 2005]
Enterprise Mobility [Thursday, November 17, 2005]
Mobile Mail Investments [Saturday, November 12, 2005]
Web 2.0 as Global SOA? [Tuesday, November 1, 2005]
The Outside-In Enterprise [Tuesday, October 25, 2005]
Platform Fever [Wednesday, October 5, 2005]
Web 2.0 Apps Mash-up [Monday, October 3, 2005]
Software-as-a-Service [Tuesday, September 27, 2005]
Service-enabling enterprise RSS [Thursday, September 15, 2005]
Technology Battles [Monday, September 12, 2005]
Customer Interaction Hubs [Thursday, August 11, 2005]
Web-based Applications [Thursday, August 11, 2005]
Push to Pull [Tuesday, August 9, 2005]
Enterprise Service Buses [Tuesday, August 9, 2005]
Rules and BPM [Wednesday, August 3, 2005]
Software Goes Free [Tuesday, August 2, 2005]
Salesforce's Multiforce [Friday, July 29, 2005]
SAP CEO Interview [Wednesday, July 27, 2005]
SAP ASP? [Monday, July 11, 2005]
IT for Mobile Staff [Monday, July 4, 2005]
IBM's SaaS moves [Thursday, June 23, 2005]
SAP's Fear [Thursday, June 16, 2005]
Web Services Reality [Wednesday, June 15, 2005]
e-Sourcing in India [Wednesday, June 15, 2005]
SaaS Blog [Tuesday, June 14, 2005]
Hosted CRM [Monday, June 13, 2005]
On-Demand Services [Saturday, June 11, 2005]
Mobile Middleware [Thursday, June 9, 2005]
SaaS Success Factors [Wednesday, June 8, 2005]
Real-Time Enterprise [Wednesday, June 1, 2005]
SOA Executive Forum [Thursday, May 26, 2005]
Mobile Enterprise Email [Thursday, May 26, 2005]
OpenLDAP [Wednesday, May 25, 2005]
Software-as-a-Service [Friday, May 6, 2005]
Oracle's Fusion [Friday, May 6, 2005]
ActiveGrid, LAMP and Java [Wednesday, May 4, 2005]
Real-time Collaboration [Tuesday, May 3, 2005]
IT in Healthcare [Saturday, April 30, 2005]
Porcess Portals [Monday, April 25, 2005]
IT Spending Priorities [Tuesday, April 19, 2005]
Mobiles in Enterprises [Friday, April 15, 2005]
Siebel and Salesforce [Friday, April 15, 2005]
Software as a Service [Thursday, April 14, 2005]
Enetrprise Blogs and Wikis [Tuesday, April 12, 2005]
Corporate RSS Made Simple [Monday, April 11, 2005]
Management Tools and IT [Sunday, April 10, 2005]
ASP Initiatives [Wednesday, April 6, 2005]
SAP vs Oracle [Friday, April 1, 2005]
E-Commerce Gets Smarter [Thursday, March 31, 2005]
Ten Trends for 2005 [Tuesday, March 29, 2005]
How Important is Real-Time? [Thursday, March 17, 2005]
Best Intranets [Wednesday, March 16, 2005]
Mobile Enterprise Pillars [Friday, March 11, 2005]
Groupware at Sun [Wednesday, March 9, 2005]
Homestead QuickSites [Tuesday, March 8, 2005]
RSS for Field Sales [Thursday, March 3, 2005]
Enterprise RSS [Wednesday, March 2, 2005]
JotSpot [Tuesday, March 1, 2005]
Blogs in Business [Thursday, February 24, 2005]
SAP Netweaver [Wednesday, February 16, 2005]
The Decade of Process [Monday, February 14, 2005]
Web Services [Saturday, February 12, 2005]
Enterprise Mobile Development [Wednesday, February 9, 2005]
Messaging Server Trends [Saturday, January 29, 2005]
Integration Brokers and SOA [Tuesday, January 25, 2005]
Universal Business Language [Friday, January 21, 2005]
Univa [Wednesday, January 12, 2005]
Enterprise RSS [Friday, December 31, 2004]
IBM and Enterprise Search [Friday, December 17, 2004]
Cassatt [Tuesday, December 14, 2004]
EContent 100 [Monday, December 6, 2004]
ActiveGrid [Thursday, November 25, 2004]
Applied Web Services [Tuesday, November 23, 2004]
SAP's Growing Dominance [Monday, November 22, 2004]
Wal-Mart's Data Mining [Thursday, November 18, 2004]
Portal's Purpose [Wednesday, November 17, 2004]
Enterprise Service Bus [Friday, November 12, 2004]
SugarCRM [Thursday, November 11, 2004]
jBPM Workflow Engine [Thursday, October 28, 2004]
SAP's NetWeaver's Challenge [Wednesday, October 20, 2004]
Google Search Appliance [Tuesday, October 19, 2004]
Vortex Conference [Tuesday, October 12, 2004]
Wal-Mart and IT [Friday, October 8, 2004]
Advantaged Supply Network [Monday, September 27, 2004]
The Linux Enterprise [Friday, September 24, 2004]
Grid and SOA [Monday, September 20, 2004]
Software-as-a-Service [Monday, September 13, 2004]
Mobility in Enterprise Apps [Wednesday, September 8, 2004]
Corporate Taxonomy [Friday, August 20, 2004]
No-Frills CRM [Friday, July 30, 2004]
Rich Clients [Monday, July 26, 2004]
BPEL [Tuesday, July 20, 2004]
Rich Web Apps [Tuesday, July 20, 2004]
JBoss's Plans [Monday, July 19, 2004]
Enterprise Service Bus [Wednesday, July 14, 2004]
KM Tools [Tuesday, July 6, 2004]
Business Rules [Friday, July 2, 2004]
BI and Search [Monday, June 28, 2004]
Salesforce.com [Tuesday, June 22, 2004]
Adam Bosworth Interview [Friday, June 11, 2004]
3 Ps of SOA [Monday, June 7, 2004]
Mobile Workflow [Thursday, June 3, 2004]
BEA's Plans [Friday, May 21, 2004]
Server-based Applications [Thursday, May 20, 2004]
Business Process Factory [Tuesday, May 18, 2004]
More from Carr [Monday, May 17, 2004]
Enterprise Portals [Tuesday, May 11, 2004]
Carr on IT [Friday, May 7, 2004]
eBusiness Impact [Tuesday, May 4, 2004]
SOA Explained [Wednesday, April 28, 2004]
Tibco's BPM Buy [Tuesday, April 27, 2004]
IBM's SOA Strategy [Thursday, April 22, 2004]
Micro-Workflow [Tuesday, April 20, 2004]
SAP's Challenges [Friday, April 16, 2004]
Real-Time Information [Wednesday, April 7, 2004]
Flash in the Enterprise [Wednesday, March 31, 2004]
Business Process Innovation [Wednesday, March 31, 2004]
Social Software [Tuesday, March 30, 2004]
Visual Programming [Monday, March 29, 2004]
SAP focus on SMEs [Monday, March 22, 2004]
IBM on SOA [Monday, March 22, 2004]
Groove 3.0 [Thursday, March 18, 2004]
Internet Security Startups [Tuesday, March 16, 2004]
Streaming Software [Saturday, March 13, 2004]
Blogging in Business [Friday, March 12, 2004]
Software as Service [Tuesday, March 2, 2004]
Corporate Software Strategy [Saturday, February 28, 2004]
Enterprise Instant Messaging [Friday, February 27, 2004]
Adam Bosworth Interview [Thursday, February 26, 2004]
Opsware Interview [Tuesday, February 24, 2004]
IM in Corporates [Tuesday, February 24, 2004]
Intranet Solutions [Monday, February 23, 2004]
Halsey Minor's Grand Central [Thursday, February 5, 2004]
Utility Computing Perspective [Wednesday, February 4, 2004]
Blogs and Business [Friday, January 30, 2004]
IBM's Makeover [Monday, January 26, 2004]
Kinzan [Friday, January 23, 2004]
Growing IT Services [Friday, January 23, 2004]
Web Services Shakeout [Wednesday, January 21, 2004]
Computing's Future [Saturday, January 17, 2004]
e-Business 2003 Review [Friday, January 16, 2004]
Enterprise Portals [Thursday, January 15, 2004]
ChemConnect as B2B Success [Saturday, January 10, 2004]
IT Hierarchy of Needs [Saturday, December 27, 2003]
Amazon's Web Services [Monday, December 22, 2003]
Salesforce IPO and Numbers [Friday, December 19, 2003]
Microsoft-SAP Battle [Tuesday, December 16, 2003]
IM's Future [Wednesday, December 3, 2003]
Blogs for Enterprises [Tuesday, December 2, 2003]
Status Reports 2.0 [Thursday, November 27, 2003]
Grand Central's BPEL [Wednesday, November 26, 2003]
Wal-mart's EDI Use [Saturday, November 22, 2003]
TechKnowledgy [Friday, November 21, 2003]
Macromedia Flex [Thursday, November 20, 2003]
Traction Release 3.0 [Wednesday, November 19, 2003]
Salesforce Plans [Thursday, November 13, 2003]
Designing Business Processes [Thursday, November 13, 2003]
Business Process Fusion [Wednesday, November 12, 2003]
Process Management Portals [Friday, November 7, 2003]
Dell gets into Support [Wednesday, November 5, 2003]
Social Software for KM [Tuesday, November 4, 2003]
Identity Management [Thursday, October 30, 2003]
Enterprise Software in China [Tuesday, October 28, 2003]
Best Intranets [Wednesday, October 22, 2003]
RSS for Enterprises [Tuesday, October 21, 2003]
NetSuite's ASP Service [Monday, October 13, 2003]
IBM's Next Transition [Saturday, October 11, 2003]
P&G's Supply Chain [Friday, October 10, 2003]
B2B Update [Thursday, October 9, 2003]
Enterprise Social Software [Monday, October 6, 2003]
SAP's NetWeaver [Friday, October 3, 2003]
Knowledge Flows [Tuesday, September 30, 2003]
Intranet Aggregators [Thursday, September 25, 2003]
NetLedger to NetSuite [Monday, September 22, 2003]
Intranet Weblogs [Monday, September 22, 2003]
Event-driven Enterprise [Thursday, September 18, 2003]
CRM [Saturday, September 13, 2003]
IT Matters [Thursday, August 28, 2003]
Walmart drives Internet EDI [Tuesday, August 19, 2003]
Kenamea and Composite Apps [Monday, August 11, 2003]
K-Log Software [Saturday, August 2, 2003]
RDBMS and XML [Thursday, July 31, 2003]
BPM and PSB [Tuesday, July 29, 2003]
ESB, OSS, BPM [Thursday, July 17, 2003]
Web Services [Tuesday, July 15, 2003]
Enterprise Architecture [Monday, July 14, 2003]
Composite Applications [Friday, July 11, 2003]
Europe.eGov [Tuesday, July 8, 2003]
Ellison on Databases [Wednesday, July 2, 2003]
On Demand Business [Friday, June 27, 2003]
SAP's Strength [Friday, June 27, 2003]
Web Services [Thursday, June 26, 2003]
RSS Power [Saturday, June 21, 2003]
RSS Ecosystem [Monday, June 16, 2003]
Technology Wishlists [Tuesday, June 10, 2003]
BPM [Monday, June 2, 2003]
IT Matters [Friday, May 30, 2003]
Business Ignorance [Monday, May 26, 2003]
EAI Troubles? [Monday, May 26, 2003]
UNeDocs [Thursday, May 22, 2003]
k-Collector [Tuesday, May 20, 2003]
IT's Impact [Monday, May 19, 2003]
Use of J2EE/EJB [Sunday, May 18, 2003]
Bosak on UBL [Friday, May 16, 2003]
Knowledge in a CMS [Thursday, May 8, 2003]
Proxies [Monday, May 5, 2003]
eBiz on the Net [Sunday, May 4, 2003]
Routing for Web Services [Wednesday, April 30, 2003]
Real-Time Intelligence [Wednesday, April 30, 2003]
Enterprise Weblogs [Friday, April 25, 2003]
MicroPortals [Thursday, April 17, 2003]
JBoss [Wednesday, April 2, 2003]
Adam Bosworth's Big Picture [Wednesday, April 2, 2003]
Project Weblog [Tuesday, April 1, 2003]
Metabolic Pathways [Thursday, March 27, 2003]
Workplace IM [Wednesday, March 12, 2003]
Cautious CIOs [Wednesday, March 12, 2003]
Enterprise Weblogs [Saturday, March 8, 2003]
Online CRM Software [Wednesday, February 26, 2003]
Web Services Evolution [Friday, February 21, 2003]
What CIOs are Buying [Wednesday, February 19, 2003]
Team Blog [Sunday, February 16, 2003]
XDocs to InfoPath [Thursday, February 13, 2003]
Real-Time Enterprise [Thursday, February 13, 2003]
Knowledge Management [Thursday, February 13, 2003]
Forms Management [Thursday, February 6, 2003]
Web Services [Tuesday, February 4, 2003]
Hosted Software Vendors [Friday, January 31, 2003]
Blogs in Enterprises [Friday, January 17, 2003]
Ellison's Vision [Friday, January 3, 2003]
JetBlue and Web Services [Wednesday, December 11, 2002]
Oracle targets European SMEs [Thursday, December 5, 2002]
P2P Update [Monday, December 2, 2002]
Web Services Myths [Friday, November 29, 2002]
Unstructured Data [Friday, November 29, 2002]
Small Business Software Needs [Thursday, November 28, 2002]
ERP on the Web [Thursday, November 28, 2002]
Intranet Usability Report [Thursday, November 28, 2002]
IBM's On-Demand Applications [Monday, November 25, 2002]
Mass-Market XML [Thursday, November 21, 2002]
Post-Bubble Tech Spending [Wednesday, November 20, 2002]
Office 11 and XML [Tuesday, November 19, 2002]
Web Services Glossary [Tuesday, November 19, 2002]
A Plan for Software [Saturday, November 16, 2002]
Open-Source ERP [Saturday, November 2, 2002]
IDC on Web Services [Monday, October 28, 2002]
Hagel on Web Services [Sunday, October 27, 2002]
ERP Payoffs and Pitfalls [Thursday, October 24, 2002]
Mid-Market ERP [Wednesday, October 23, 2002]
Utility Computing [Wednesday, October 23, 2002]
Public and Googled Email [Tuesday, October 15, 2002]
XML Problems [Tuesday, October 8, 2002]
Enterprise Events [Monday, October 7, 2002]
Feedback Universe [Thursday, October 3, 2002]
BI's Importance [Thursday, September 26, 2002]
Holistic Web Services [Wednesday, September 25, 2002]
Software as a Service [Wednesday, September 25, 2002]
Siebel UAN [Tuesday, September 17, 2002]
The New Three Cs of E-Business [Saturday, September 14, 2002]
Jim Allchin on XML [Saturday, September 14, 2002]
mySAP CRM [Tuesday, September 10, 2002]
Supply-Chain Management [Saturday, September 7, 2002]
Real-Time Enterprise [Thursday, September 5, 2002]
Siebel's Challenges [Thursday, September 5, 2002]
SalesForce.com - SF Gate [Wednesday, September 4, 2002]
Corporate IM [Wednesday, September 4, 2002]
Connecting Employees [Friday, August 30, 2002]
Web Services: Corba Redux? [Monday, August 26, 2002]
Oracle Collaboration Suite [Wednesday, August 21, 2002]
Tomorrow's Notebooks [Tuesday, August 20, 2002]
RosettaNet-UCC Merger [Friday, August 16, 2002]
New Web Services Specs [Friday, August 9, 2002]
SAP's new boss [Friday, August 9, 2002]
.Net and J2EE [Tuesday, August 6, 2002]
Microsoft .Net [Tuesday, August 6, 2002]
Web Services Standards [Thursday, August 1, 2002]
CRM's Evolution [Thursday, August 1, 2002]
Slate on Web Services [Sunday, July 28, 2002]
EDI to Web Services [Tuesday, July 23, 2002]
Amazon Web Services [Wednesday, July 17, 2002]
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I can understand some of the sentiment behind the 'ban comic sans' campaign as often the font is used in an inappropriate way. Comic Sans was designed originally for use only by a comic application. That application and its inspiration was Microsoft Bob. MSBob used Times New Roman in cartoon balloons for the words of cartoon animals and characters...
Having said that, I feel that the use of my image, taken from a photo posted on my personal website, is inappropriate. The way people use the font and its distribution with Microsoft products has nothing to do with me.
Posted by Nilesh