| Old Articles: <Older 381-390 Newer> |
 |
PC Magazine September 15, 2003 Cade Metz |
IBM's Budding Innovators Changes are afoot at IBM. In August, the company offered a glimpse of the future at its Industry Solutions Lab in Hawthorne, New York, where budding researchers are hard at work in the Extreme Blue internship program.  |
PC Magazine September 9, 2003 John C. Dvorak |
A Weird and Twisted Tale The story might explain why Gates removed himself as CEO of his own company.  |
CIO September 15, 2003 Eric Knorr |
A Bargain So Far Web services a success? Yes, but in ways we never really considered.  |
CIO September 15, 2003 Evers & McMillan |
A Kinder, Gentler Fight Talk on the campaign trail can get pretty rough, especially when the debate pits open source against Microsoft software. But now, Microsoft says, the gloves are back on, though the company has pledged to take the invective out of its talking points about Linux and open-source software.  |
CIO September 1, 2003 Christopher Koch |
Oracle's Appetite Makes Some Users Feel Queasy Oracle, a big ERP fish, has been stalking smaller fish PeopleSoft and J.D. Edwards. But the prospects of PeopleSoft getting swallowed up gives many customers indigestion. That's because their software will eventually be consumed as part of the consolidation meal.  |
CRM September 2003 Guglielmo et al. |
The 2003 Market Leaders (Part 2) Which vendors are leading the industry? CRM magazine scrutinized CRM suite vendors and related categories to uncover the top-five leaders in each category: enterprise CRM, mid-market CRM, analytics, contact center outsourcers, and consulting firms.  |
CRM September 2003 Barton Goldenberg |
Service Is the Long-Term Winner Combining CRM with product excellence delivers competitive differentiation that can outlast the competition.  |
CRM August 27, 2003 Jim Dickie |
The CRM Report Card Is In Companies get fewer F's, but not nearly enough A's.  |
PC Magazine August 27, 2003 Alexandra Robbins |
Ordered to Pay Up Had Robin Hood's booty of choice been copies of Microsoft Office, he might have been involved in the largest recovery ever achieved under California's antitrust laws -- one that partially benefits lower-income students.  |
PC Magazine August 27, 2003 Michael J. Miller |
Fighting the OS Wars: Two of Three Perspectives In the past couple of weeks, I had the opportunity to sit down with senior executives from SCO, IBM, and Sun Microsystems and discuss the future of enterprise software. Here are the views from SCO and IBM.  |
| <Older 381-390 Newer> Return to current articles. |