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.
AppScan 6.0 is the second official release of the product since Watchfire acquired the technology when it bought Sanctum. The previous release was mainly a rebranding, and AppScan 6.0 is the first version of the product on which Watchfire has truly put its stamp. Click here to read the full review of Watchfires AppScan 6.0. […]
Imagine you went to a restaurant for dinner and became violently ill. After a little investigation, you find out that some of your food was uncooked, that the salad was prepared with a knife that had been used to cut raw chicken and that the mayonnaise in the dressing had been kept in a broken […]
Ive been writing Tech Directions for a long time now, and it recently occurred to me that theres a lot of diversity in this column. In fact, to refer to Tech Directions as “one product” would be completely incorrect. When you think about it, there are actually many different versions of Tech Directions: There are […]
As I write this column, Oracle has just acquired the open-source company Sleepycat and its embedded database, Berkeley DB. By the time you read this, its quite possible that Oracle will have acquired even more open-source companies. There has been plenty of discussion about the effects of Oracles Sleepycat acquisition on the database market and […]
Boy, its been a tough few weeks for me. Ive heard from some readers whove said they are unhappy with my columns and/or will stop reading them altogether. Why are these readers unhappy? Ill let one of the letters I received tell you: Dear Mr. Rapoza, Ive been a longtime reader of your Tech Directions […]
Guess what? Ive been given the opportunity to try out this new, cutting-edge car design. The car includes all kinds of new features for automatic pilot, collision avoidance and speed control. The auto manufacturer has quietly implied that this car is really just for testing purposes and that I shouldnt take it off a controlled […]
Microsofts slow march to regain momentum in the Web browser market continued in late January with a preview release of Beta 2 of Internet Explorer 7. The beta shows a lot of good progress, but, as weve said with almost every new IE release weve reviewed, its still playing catch-up. The Beta 2 preview release […]
You can call me Jim Rapoza, the Peter Coffee Killer. Well, not literally, but Im a killer of his Epicenters columns. Surely, now that youre reading my columns, youll soon find that you no longer need to read his columns—or the columns of any other tech writer, for that matter. Soon our own Eric Lundquist […]
Just when you thought you had it all figured out—that Sea-Monkeys were really brine shrimp—along comes SeaMonkey. Another instant pet? No, this SeaMonkey is basically the Mozilla Internet suite with a new name and a new logo. I have always liked the Internet suite model, and thought it was actually a better fit for corporate […]
Microsofts slow march to regain momentum in the Web browser market continues with the Jan. 31 preview release of Beta 2 of Internet Explorer 7. The beta shows a lot of good progress, but, as weve said with almost every new IE release weve reviewed, its still playing catch-up. When the first beta of Windows […]