Jedox AG announced the
release of Palo 2.5, the
latest version of its
flagship application that
allows enterprises to
centralize key Excel
spreadsheet data for use
throughout the
organization. Leading the
lineup of valuable
improvements to Palo 2.5
are a newly-optimized
MOLAP (Multidimensional
OnLine Analytical
Processing) engine and
intelligent local data
cache, giving users even
faster read and
write-back performance.
Other improvements
include faster
multi-dimensional data
processing, an enhanced
multidimensional formula
editor, and an advanced
query capability.
Curl announced the
release of its Curl Data
Kit (CDK), the second
product to be delivered
from Curl's Open Source
initiative. As the newest
addition to Version 6.0
of the Curl Rich Internet
Application (RIA)
Platform, the CDK library
facilitates building
data-centric applications
in Curl and provides
support for local SQL
databases. By allowing
the storage and retrieval
of data using the popular
SQLite engine, the CDK
library is an important
foundation for
occasionally connected
computing (OCC)
applications developed
with Curl.
Sun is offering to put
its open source Glassfish
application server and
MySQL database on as many
servers as a company's
got for a flat annual
subscription - no
counting servers, CPUS,
cores or virtual
machines, it says.
Five years after Samba
2.0 - with 31 dot
releases intervening -
the Samba team has
finally delivered Samba
3.2, the latest FOSS file
and print server suite
for Microsoft Windows
clients. Samba now has
90% of the file
functionality and 95% of
the printing
functionality and 60% of
the authentication
functionality it needs to
subsist but Microsoft,
meanwhile, has pushed on
to the SMB 2 protocol and
there Samba is 90%
behind, according to
Samba team leader Jeremy
Allison.
Two of the biggest
launches in Rich Internet
Application history took
place in 2007/2008 when
Adobe launched AIR 1.0 in
February '08 and
Microsoft launched
Silverlight (September
'07). At the 6th
International AJAXWorld
RIA Conference & Expo in
October SYS-CON Events is
delighted to be
presenting major industry
keynotes from the two
industry executives with
overall responsibility
for both of those massive
richer-web initiatives:
Adobe's CTO Kevin Lynch
and Scott Guthrie,
Corporate Vice President
of Microsoft's .NET
Developer Platform.
MuleSource announced
general availability of
Mule Galaxy Enterprise, a
new production-ready
solution for storing and
managing SOA artifacts
offering new
enterprise-class features
such as clustering for
high availability, an
extensible query engine,
and more. Mule Galaxy
Enterprise, the open
source SOA governance
platform with integrated
registry and repository,
builds on the success of
the Mule Galaxy Community
Edition, released in
January 2008.
Oracle announced new
releases of Oracle
Berkeley DB, Oracle
Berkeley DB XML and
Oracle Berkeley DB Java
Edition. The new releases
and enhancements signify
Oracle's commitment to
continued innovation
across the Oracle
Berkeley DB product
family, while maintaining
the open source dual
license business model.
Open source applications
provider Red Hat has
introduced three
applications targeting
enterprise-wide adoption
of next-generation
virtualization. It has
introduced embedded Linux
Hypervisor for hosting
virtualized Linux and
Windows environments,
which provide
virtualization with
improved security, high
performance, and a wide
range of hardware.
Red Hat announced
advancements that extend
the Company's Linux
Automation strategy by
providing expanded
capabilities and
incorporating broadened
community involvement for
secure management of both
users and systems across
virtual and physical
enterprise
infrastructures.
Red Hat saw earnings rise
6.6% to $17.3 million, or
eight cents a share in
its first fiscal quarter
ended May 31 on revenue
up 32% year-over-year and
11% sequentially to
$156.6 million. EPS was
dead flat year-over-year.
Subscription revenue was
$130.7 million, up 27%
year-over-year and up 7%
sequentially. Training
and services were up 64%
to $25.9 million.
Nokia wants to buy the
52% of the Symbian
operating system that it
doesn't already own to
open source it and set it
free. It's a defense
against advances into the
fragmented mobile space
that Nokia and Symbian
dominate - particularly -
from the looks of case -
against Google's nascent
open source Android
initiative and the
freebie Linux-based LiMo
Foundation - but then
there's also Apple's
proprietary iPhone,
Microsoft's equally
proprietary,
royalty-charging Windows
Mobile and the
ever-present Blackberry
and Palm.
Five years after Samba
2.0 - with 31 dot
releases intervening -
the Samba team has
finally delivered Samba
3.2, the latest FOSS file
and print server suite
for Microsoft Windows
clients. Samba now has
90% of the file
functionality and 95% of
the printing
functionality and 60% of
the authentication
functionality it needs to
subsist but Microsoft,
meanwhile, has pushed on
to SMB 2 protocol and
there Samba is 90%
behind, according to
Samba team leader Jeremy
Allison.
Quest Software announced
the latest release of its
Java profiler, JProbe
8.0, which is now offered
as a plug-in to the
Eclipse Java Integrated
Development Environment
(IDE). The release of
this capability aligns
with the increased
adoption of the open
source development.
Launching JProbe in an
Eclipse environment
enables users to adopt
continuous performance
testing best practices.
Apatar announced the
CDYNE Death Index
connector for the Apatar
Open Source Data
Integration toolset. The
new connector verifies
the Social Security
number against the U.S.
Social Security Death
Index database and
returns whether the
customer is departed,
eliminating the
possibility to use a
deceased person's
identification or deliver
goods to individuals who
do not exist. Using the
CDYNE Death Index Web
service, Apatar checks
the legitimacy of social
security numbers
extracted from corporate
applications (such as
Salesforce.com and
SugarCRM) or databases
(MySQL, Microsoft Access,
Oracle, etc.) and allows
for this data to be
filtered or cleansed.
HP has open sourced the
Tru64 Unix Advanced File
System (AdvFS) that it
got from DEC by way of
Compaq. It's sent the
16-year-old Alpha-based
source code, representing
what it calls 400 R&D
years, over to
Sourceforge under the
GPLv2 license as a
reference implementation
of an enterprise Linux
file system. It says it
will provide design
documentation, test
suites and engineering
resources.
Protecode announced the
general availability of
its software development
tool for governance and
Intellectual Property
(IP) management. The
latest release enables
commercial software
developers and open
source creators to
accelerate managed
adoption of open source
code in a simple,
painless process.
Additionally, the
software is now available
to the Eclipse community
for anyone working on an
active Eclipse project.
Protecode automatically
generates records of
software content,
identifies and reports
associated pedigree and
licensing information by
checking its properties
and compliance against an
organization's policies,
establishing IP ownership
and creating a software
Bill of Materials (BOM).
Red Hat announced three
strategic initiatives
targeting enterprise-wide
adoption of
next-generation
virtualization. These
initiatives will enable
customers to deploy
virtualization across
their IT infrastructure
by offering features and
cost benefits that go
beyond competitive
solutions. With this
portfolio growth, Red Hat
solutions provide the
market with comprehensive
virtualization
capabilities.
Genuitec announced the
availability of MyEclipse
6.5 Blue Edition; a
next-generation ALM and
open source-friendly IDE
for WebSphere. Of note,
users will be drawn to
multiple technologies not
currently supported by
IBM's RAD, such as
Maven4MyEclipse (a
professional
implementation of
Maven2), popular open
source mainstays such as
Spring, Hibernate, JPA,
the Matisse Swing GUI
Designer and more. In
6.5, users will also have
the ability to run
multiple WebSphere server
instances, migrate
WSAD/RAD projects to
MyEclipse Blue Edition
and enjoy WebSphere 6.0
portal server support.
These advanced features
offer organizations
maximum flexibility to
manage the entire
application life-cycle
with the infrastructure
they already have.
AccuRev announced that
Mediasurface standardized
on AccuRev for
process-centric software
change and configuration
management (SCCM). As a
result, development teams
in the United Kingdom and
Bangalore, India now work
as a set of integrated
teams for managing
Feature Driven
Development, its agile
approach to manage the
software release process.
Sun has released a new
real-time,
shared-nothing,
carrier-grade version of
MySQL called MySQL
Cluster Carrier Grade
Edition 6.3 certified for
use in telecom
environments, such as
subscriber data
management systems (hlr,
hss) and service delivery
platforms.
WSO2 has today announced
the availability of the
open source WSO2
Enterprise Service Bus
(ESB), Version 1.7 to
support enterprises'
heterogeneous,
high-volume
service-oriented
architecture (SOA)
demands. The WSO2 ESB 1.7
offers new enhancements
to stability and
availability - resulting
in scalability and
error-free connections
for high-volume SOA
environments, even on
standard hardware.
Red Hat is open sourcing
Project Spacewalk, the
Red Hat Network (RHN)
Satellite code base under
the GPLv2 license. RHN
Satellite is the stuff
behind the Red Hat
Network and lets
customers manage RHEL
updates inside their
firewall. It does systems
provisioning, updates and
monitoring across
physical and virtual
servers.
It only took 15 years but
Wine, the open source
Windows rewrite, so to
speak, that lets Linux
run Windows applications
natively, has reached its
first stable release,
Wine 1.0. Compatibility
isn't perfect, the Wine
folk say, and not
everything will run
(particularly newer apps)
but thousands of programs
appear to be working just
fine. There's a list of
tested program that's
heavy on games. Both Wine
source and binaries will
be available.
GPLv3, the great General
Public License rewrite,
is now a year-old and
used by 2,345 open source
projects including
Ubuntu, SugarCRM and
Samba. Adoption has
reportedly been growing
at about 20% a month over
the past six months.
According to some figures
sent around by Black
Duck, approximately 58%
of all open source
projects today are
covered by GPLv2 and 11%
by LGPLv2.
Jaspersoft announced the
availability of its new
Jaspersoft Business
Intelligence Suite v3
Professional Edition.
Jaspersoft v3 marks a
major milestone for open
source business
intelligence software by
providing rich
enterprise-class
functionality delivered
through state-of-the-art
interactive Web 2.0
interfaces.
Europe's antitrust chief
Neelie Kroes, who has now
taken on the role of open
standards evangelist,
gave a speech at
OpenForum Europe the
other day recommending
that business and
government adopt 'open
standards.' 'Open
standards' in Neelie's
mouth is code for 'open
source' or at least 'not
Microsoft.'
Open source has made
significant inroads into
middleware deployments in
the enterprise. More and
more, open source is
being used to deliver the
benefits of SOA and open
source to the enterprise.
There are many custom
Enterprise Service Bus
deployments waiting to be
upgraded to a simple,
open and affordable SOA
integration platform.
This session explores
where open source is
getting the most traction
in SOA deployments, with
a focus on ESB, and
illustrates this by
describing some of the
customer SOA solutions
the speaker sees at Red
Hat.
Xandros announced the
release of the all new
Xandros BridgeWays
Management Console for
Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
The BridgeWays Management
Console, available as a
free download from the
Xandros web site, brings
powerful graphical
management of Red Hat
servers to system
administrators who may
have Windows Server skill
sets, but no prior Linux
experience. Linux
administrators will also
find that this all-in-one
remote management console
relieves them from
resorting to command line
options or using multiple
tools to administer their
Red Hat servers. Multiple
servers and services are
integrated into a single
'Managed Community' that
can be remotely
administered from either
a Red Hat server, or from
any Windows XP or Vista
desktop.
Citrix is losing its
sales boss John Burris to
one of the open source
contingent's few publicly
traded companies, the
struggling Sourcefire,
creator of Snort, the
security software, whose
$15 IPO price has pretty
been shaved in half since
its debut in March of
2007.
Red Hat is beta testing
its JBoss Enterprise
Application Platform as a
solution on Amazon's
Elastic Compute Cloud
(EC2). It's a way to
tickle enterprise
adoption of its Java
application server. EC2
offers developers,
enterprises and startups
a web-scale compute
infrastructure with
virtually unlimited
capacity and
pay-as-you-go pricing.
And of course clouds
right now are very
chi-chi.
Likewise Software
announced that it has
been named as category
award-winning finalist in
the second annual Red Hat
Innovation Awards. Red
Hat selected six
finalists in the second
annual Red Hat Innovation
Awards, designed to
recognize the outstanding
use, innovation and
extension of Red Hat
solutions by customers,
partners and the open
source community. One Red
Hat Innovator of the Year
will be selected from the
six finalists during the
Red Hat Summit, taking
place June 18-20, 2008 at
the Hynes Convention
Center in Boston, Mass.
SNORT creator Sourcefire,
one of the few publicly
owned open source
companies, has rejected
an unsolicited
$7.50-a-share offer, a
total of roughly $187.4
million cash, from
privately held Barracuda
Networks, claiming it
undervalues the
enterprise security
company despite the 13%
premium. Sourcefire,
worth 18 bucks a share
shortly after it went
public last March,
recently found a new CEO.
Open source software is a
disruptive technology
it's about changing the
status quo. Open source
is rock and roll while
proprietary software is
easy listening. That's
why I always admired
JBoss' Marc Fleury. Marc
was and is a bad boy, a
rebel, and he played the
part to a successful $350
million dollar
acquisition of JBoss by
Red Hat. Beyond that he
was a professional who
built a company that was
professional and
respected grew his
customer base and created
an iconic software brand.
All things that are
consistent with open
source software, he also
seemed to have a good
time doing it.
Open source innovator and
Snort creator,
Sourcefire, announced the
availability of
OfficeCat, a free
security tool that
enables users to easily
identify potentially
threatening Microsoft
Office files. Unlike
products that detect
attempts to exploit known
Microsoft
vulnerabilities,
OfficeCat can determine
if a file contains
hostile content before it
is opened.
Why is the 'collaborative
source' development
approach uniquely suited
and required to drive
innovation in the
mobile-communications
software stack? What are
the early fruits of its
impact? Out of the
principles of open source
and the particular market
and legal constraints of
the telecom world, a
best-of-two-worlds
approach is being forged:
the collaborative source
development model that is
spawning overdue
innovation in mobile.
Red Hat said Wednesday
that it had settled
patent litigation brought
against it two years ago
by Firestar Software Inc
in what was possibly the
very first patent
infringement suit ever
brought against an open
source company. It also
turns out that Red Hat
was sued by an outfit
called DataTern Inc just
this past April on
another patent. Bank of
America, Visa, Wachovia
and Delta Air Lines were
also named.
ComScore has upped
Google's US search share.
It was 59.8% in March and
now for April it's 61.6%.
It gave Yahoo 20.4% and
Microsoft 9.1%. HP and
Foxconn International, a
unit of Taiwan-based Hon
Hai Precision Industry,
the big contract
manufacturer, are
building a $50 million
factory outside St
Petersburg where they
will produce a
half-million PCs a year
for the Russian market
starting next year. It
could become a hub for
the Baltic states and
Scandinavia. Hon Hai,
meanwhile, is going to
start making laptops.
From Application
Virtualization to Xen, a
round-up of the
virtualization themes &
topics being discussed in
NYC June 23-24, 2008 by
the world-class speaker
faculty at the 3rd
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo being held by
SYS-CON Events in The
Roosevelt Hotel, in
midtown Manhattan.
Although the SaaS
development platform has
gotten a lot of
attention, it has so far
been remarkably closed
and proprietary. The
Platform-as-a-Service
leader, SalesForce, has
both a draconian hosting
policy (host your apps
anywhere, as long as it's
with us) but also a
proprietary language (who
needs Java when you've
got Apex!?). I think the
same trends driving open
source adoption
everywhere else in the
industry will ultimately
drive SaaS adoption of
open source, particularly
by ISVs whose business
plan does not include a
low multiple sale to
their proprietary hosting
provider.
EnterpriseDB co-founder
and CEO Andy Astor has
stepped aside so Ed
Boyajian, brought in from
Red Hat, can take the
four-year-old company to
the proverbial next
level, they said.
Boyajian has been running
Red Hat's North American
sales under one title or
another for the last six
years and he's at
EnterpriseDB to repeat
the experience Red Hat
Enterprise Linux has had
during that time.