Monthly Archives: December 2004
Oracle Set to Expand Integration Hubs
SAN FRANCISCO—Oracle plans to further embrace its renewed effort at application integration that it began a year ago, the companys president said here Monday.
The...
Oracle Lets Business Intelligence 10g Stand Alone
SAN FRANCISCO—Oracle is giving Microsoft a run for its money in the BI tools war, with an announcement at the opening day of Oracle...
Tools Let Wireless LANs Branch Out
With wireless LANs firmly established in the headquarters of many large enterprises, WLAN management specialists are now addressing the needs of their customers branch...
2004 Was a Rough Year for Security
When I look back at all the major bad security news in 2004, I wonder how the worlds computing infrastructure still manages to get...
Topic & Industry Centers
Accounting and FinanceCovers software used across industries by companies to manage finances, such as payroll, bookkeeping and tax programs.
Anti-spywareNews and analysis on potentially unwanted...
No XP SP2 Security Fixes for Win2K: Instead An SP2-Less Rollup
Microsofts decision to scrap plans for Windows 2000 Service Pack 5 has effectively killed all hopes that security enhancements built into Windows XP SP2...
IBM Tools Give Developers an Assist
IBM announced Monday a set of offerings from its Virtual Innovation Center for Hardware, including "how-to" guides and a solution sizing toolkit, all aimed...
Oracle Builds Tsunami to Wipe Out File Management Woes
Oracle Corp. is crystallizing an enterprise content management initiative and shoring up its integration strategy to answer growing customer demand for both unstructured data...
Twists on Anti-terrorist Security Needed
With the threat of terrorism continuing to cast shadows over airports, seaports and border crossings, the United States will require better physical security technology...
Change at Health and Human Services Department Wont Stop Health IT
The resignation of Tommy Thompson, head of the Department of Health and Human Services will probably have little effect on health IT, say industry...