Steve Gillmor

About

Steve Gillmor is editor of eWEEK.com's Messaging & Collaboration Center. As a principal reviewer at Byte magazine, Gillmor covered areas including Visual Basic, NT open systems, Lotus Notes and other collaborative software systems. After stints as a contributing editor at InformationWeek Labs, editor in chief at Enterprise Development Magazine, editor in chief and editorial director at XML and Java Pro Magazines, he joined InfoWorld as test center director and columnist.

Sun Needs to Accept Its Software Success

Having been through the dot-com bubble-wringer first, it is fitting that Sun Microsystems has worked its way back to a viable business model ahead of the competition. In his JavaOne keynote, Chairman and CEO Scott McNealy touted Suns moves toward subscription services. As with the opening JavaOne keynote, by president and chief operating officer Jonathan […]

IEs Failings Point Way to RSS

Internet Explorer has come under attack in recent weeks not just from malicious coders but also from CERT (the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team) and now, the most devious opponent of all, RSS. The latest exploits have leveraged IEs ActiveX and Active scripting, and IIS (Internet Information Server) security holes to unleash a wave of […]

The Open Conversation

Its JavaOne time again this week in San Francisco, and for once its an apt title. Is Java one, or is it a train wreck waiting to happen in grand Unix Balkanization style? Framed in the usual debate between the open-source and open-standards crowds, Java is commonly portrayed as a proprietary wedge struggling for relevance […]

Suns Schwartz: Java Needs Perspectives to Grow

Pressure has been building on Sun Microsystems for months, if not years, to address open-sourcing Java. In an open letter to Suns Rob Gingell, IBMs Rod Smith offered to help Sun move toward that goal. Now, Sun is hosting a debate on the issue at its annual JavaOne developer conference this week in San Francisco. […]

The RSS Paradox

A few weeks ago, the SciFi Channel broadcast a four-part miniseries involving time travel. I am a sucker for time-travel stories, to a certain point. That point is where the designated deliverer of exposition calls up the Great Guiding Principle of time-travel projects, wherein the immutable laws of screwing around with time dictate that nothing […]

Gmail a Gentler HailStorm?

In his speech at BEAs eworld conference in San Francisco, open-source activist and publisher Tim OReilly described Microsofts defunct HailStorm project as a good idea from the wrong company. HailStorms notion of a massive in-memory cloud of XML data and metadata was doomed, not by the daunting mechanics of schematizing a broad set of generic […]

BEAs Bosworth Brews Alchemy

At Borland Software Corp., Microsoft Corp., his startup Crossgain and now as chief architect at BEA Systems Inc., Adam Bosworth has shepherded more than his share of XML and Internet standards. Now, with his WebLogic Workshop framework released as the open-source Beehive project, Bosworth is setting his sights on extending the browser via the Alchemy […]

As E-Mail Hassles Pile Up, RSS Is the Elephant in the Room

According to a Gartner statistic cited at this weeks INBOX conference in San Jose, Calif., 75 percent of all knowledge assets exist in e-mail. E-mail is a corporate asset, goes the logic. And a corporate liability, too, as Microsoft famously discovered. These days, you almost need an attorney on retainer to open your e-mail. Remember […]

Gates Paying Attention to RSS

Bill Gates chose carefully his first public comments on RSS and the tectonic shift its rending across the technology landscape. The audience was not a roomful of geeks at VSLive, not a consumer-facing keynote crowd at CES, not even a developer conference like this weeks TechEd. Instead, it was bridge partner Warren Buffet and other […]

IBMs Workplace Hurdles

With IBM Workplaces new rich-client strategy, Big Blue appears ready to challenge Microsoft for control of its core platform. No, not Windows. And no, not Office, either. Instead, the battle has been joined at Redmonds most vulnerable spot: software as a hosted service. In this attack, IBM has endorsed and bootstrapped Suns JDS (Java Desktop […]