4 Results for JasperSoft

JasperSoft Keeps Up With Changing Industry, Releases New Editions of JasperReports Pro

Jaspersoft

As OStatic's own Sam Dean puts it, Business Intelligence (BI) applications are used to better understand historical, current and future aspects of business operations. Open source BI company Jaspersoft released two new editions of its Java reporting tool JasperReports Pro today that include a whole slew of new features and upgrades, so if you've been considering giving business intelligence software a try, now might be a good time to start.

New features in JasperReports Professional include:



Jaspersoft Releases New Community Edition, Joins Open Source For America

Jaspersoft

It looks like Jaspersoft is making good use of the funding it received a few months ago. The business intelligence (BI) software maker has announced a major update to its Community Edition with new features designed to help customers better analyze data, easily create user-friendly reports, and more.

Jaspersoft Community Edition 3.5 new features include:



Open Source Business Intelligence Software On the Rise

When we recently covered the results of North Bridge Partners' 2009 Future of Open Source Survey, I noted that many of the respondents said that they see open source Business Intelligence (BI) applications as highly likely to cause disruption in the next five years. For many people, though, this application category is murky and hard to understand. What do the applications do, and what can you get in the free, open source offerings?


Jaspersoft and Hyperic Beef Up Open Source Business Intelligence

Open source business intelligence (BI) company Jaspersoft and application performance monitoring software vendor Hyperic announced today a deepening of their ongoing relationship. JasperServer Professional Edition will be embedded in the new Hyperic Operations IQ to give IT teams an in-depth look at metrics and service levels.

Before dismissing the news as just another corporate partnership, consider that these kinds of match-ups are the very thing software vendors are likely to begin offering as companies get more serious about monitoring the bottom line.