Application Development
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Red Hat debuted the first release of the storage management software it acquired last year when it bought Gluster.
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Red Hat Offers Hybrid Cloud Packages, Draws Competitive Comparisons With VMware
Red Hat debuted the first release of the storage management software it acquired last year when it bought Gluster. -
Dell Reportedly Ups Bid For Quest Software In Move To Become A Software Provider
Should Dell acquire Quest Software, it would gain instant credibility as a software vendor with a wide range of server, workspace, application and storage management applications. -
Scratching The Surface
Microsoft's surprise announcement about its Surface tablet is an attempt to gain lost ground in the mobile market. -
Red Hat Expands Cloud, Big Data Capabilities With JBoss Release
The new JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 speeds deployment of public and private cloud applications. -
No Windows Phone 8 Upgrade Path For WP7 Users
Company previews details of next-generation of Windows Phone Mobile OS, which will be based on the Windows 8 kernel. -
Sounds Of Silence: Microsoft OEM Partners Grow Quiet In Wake Of Surface
Some of Microsoft's largest OEM partners have been reluctant to respond to the software giant's new Surface tablet PC, which will rival their own Windows 8 devices later this year. -
Cisco Revamps Collaboration Portfolio Around WebEx Brand
Several major Cisco collaboration products will now have WebEx in their names, as well as some substantial technology upgrades. -
New U.S. Player Looking For A Few Good Mobility VARs
Australia's Retriever Communications, a maker of field services automation software for mobile devices, launches North American partner program with what it calls a 'silver bullet' for VARs. -
Cisco Live: New Developer Tools, Details On SDN Strategy Emerge
The second-day crop of Cisco Live announcements center on Cisco's intent to make its network infrastructure more programmable and app developer-friendly. -
21 Big Data Products To Check Out At Hadoop Summit
Looking for solutions to your Big Data problems? This week many of the biggest stars in the Hadoop universe are showing off their latest and greatest Big Data products at this week's conference in San Jose. Here's the ones we think are worth paying particular attention to. -
Microsoft Drops Metro-Only Approach For Visual Studio Express 2012
The vendor will offer Visual Studio Express 2012 for Windows Desktop, allowing users of the free version of the development tools to build software with the traditional Windows interface. -
Windows 8 Will Favor IPv6, But Continue IPv4 Support
New release of Windows will include built-in technology that determines the best protocol to use to connect PCs and devices to the Internet. -
Motorola Solutions Shows App Developers, ISVs Some Love
New Application Partner Community aims to better compensate these Motorola specialists and drive more interaction between resellers and developers. -
Oracle Goes Live With Public Cloud Service
Vendor also introduces new premium line of customer support services to complement its Exadata and Exalogic engineered systems. -
HP To Seek Up To $4B Damages From Oracle: Report
It's been reported that HP, if it convinces a jury that Oracle backed out of an agreement to develop software for HP's Unix servers, will ask that Oracle honor the agreement and/or page significant cash damages. -
Channel, Product Integration Details Emerge As Avaya Closes Radvision Acquisition
Avaya offered CRN a look at how the Radvision integration will go in the next 60 to 90 days. -
Technology Integration Group Aims To Whet China's Cloud Appetite
Technology Integration Group is betting that the cloud application development expertise it has built stateside can help spark demand in the Chinese market. -
Microsoft Offers Up Visual Studio 2012 Release Candidate
Final releases of Visual Studio 2012, Net Framework 4.5 and Team Foundation Server 2012 are due before the end of this year. -
Court Ruling: No Copyright Violations In Oracle-Google Java Case
Oracle vows to appeal a judge's decision that Google's use of Java APIs in the Android mobile operating system did not violate Oracle-owned copyrights.