Jim Rapoza

About

Jim Rapoza, Chief Technology Analyst, eWEEK.For nearly fifteen years, Jim Rapoza has evaluated products and technologies in almost every technology category for eWEEK. Mr Rapoza's current technology focus is on all categories of emerging information technology though he continues to focus on core technology areas that include: content management systems, portal applications, Web publishing tools and security. Mr. Rapoza has coordinated several evaluations at enterprise organizations, including USA Today and The Prudential, to measure the capability of products and services under real-world conditions and against real-world criteria. Jim Rapoza's award-winning weekly column, Tech Directions, delves into all areas of technologies and the challenges of managing and deploying technology today.

Service Builds All-Flash Sites

Tell me you have a service to build hosted template-based Web sites. Yawn. Say that the sites it builds are based purely on Macromedias Flash. Hmm, I havent seen that before. Then point out that you are adapting the service so that it helps businesses add value to Web sites and intranets. Now Im interested. […]

Opera 5.0 Changes Tune to Better Compete

Its tough to move up from no. 3 when nos. 1 and 2 are household names and youre a little-known company from Norway. Its even tougher when the other guys products are given away for free but you charge for yours. Accordingly, Opera Software A/S has finally bitten the bullet and released the newest version […]

Commerce Server 2000 Is a Big Step Up

Microsoft Corp. products tend to be weak in their first versions and improve with each subsequent release. Site Server, the companys first attempt at a full e-commerce system, was born weak and didnt get much better in its next two versions. Two years after the last major release, Microsoft has renamed the product Commerce Server […]

CorelDraw port relies on Wine

Coreldraw graphics Suite, one of the most popular applications for image creation and photo editing, is now available on Linux systems. However, it isnt really a native Linux application. Like many of the Corel productivity applications built for Linux, CorelDraw makes heavy use of the Wine emulation environment, which renders it less stable than a […]

Accessing Control

Axent Technologies Inc.s Webthority 3.0 is a new, simple-to-deploy access-control application that uses the companys experience in security to provide good control over who can view Web-based content. In tests, eWeek Labs found Webthority 3.0 to be a straightforward tool for variegated access to content on Web sites, extranets and intranets. Released in October, Webthority […]

Keying in on PKI

Your company needs a PKI—at least, thats what youve been told. After all, a public-key infrastructure provides important benefits such as data confidentiality, secure communications and strong authentication. But where exactly will it be implemented? To which users? To how many users? Just within the company or to business partners as well? And just what […]

Fostering better development

Building a web application can be haphazard work, as evidenced by the ubiquity of applications that are plagued by bugs and security problems. Fusebox.org, an information portal for Web developers, is trying to stomp out buggy apps by defining a standard methodology for building solid applications. The Fusebox framework was created by a group of […]

Three Certainties: Death, Taxes And Bugs

After my recent review of Netscape 6, i received e-mail from several users who had encountered bugs in the new Netscape browser. This got me thinking about bugs in general and how they affect every business and computer user out there. n Many years ago, I worked in quality assurance, and I learned then that […]