11 Results for SaaS

Open-Xchange Teams With Rack-Soft, Combines Telephony and Groupware Tools

The phrase all-in-one always puts me on edge. Perhaps that shouldn't be the case any more -- there are ever increasing numbers of software and hardware products offered in group packages, and most, if not wonderful, deliver what's claimed on the box. But instead, the first association that comes are the old school printer, copier, and fax combinations. They generally did one task well (depending on the manufacturer) and the other features didn't quite live up to even lowered expectations. The manufacturer was a huge factor in which functions worked well. Even with apparently sound off-label fax modems and drivers, printer manufacturers couldn't quite make it all work together. They deal mostly with printers, after all.

Open-Xchange's collaboration with Rack-Soft brings an all-in-one solution that's an actual solution. The partnership combines Open-Xchange's open source groupware with Rack-Soft's telephony products.



VMware's SpringSource Acquisition: More Than Meets the Eye?

Analysts and observers are still digesting the recent news of VMware's acquisition of SpringSource for $420 million, and I continue to find interesting perspectives cropping up. As we discussed here, the move has the potential to put the squeeze on Red Hat, especially in the application server and enterprise software development markets. It also gives VMware a lot more credibility with developers, because SpringSource's Spring Framework is a popular enterprise Java programming environment, it maintains the Apache Tomcat Java app server project, and more. It also gives VMware a strong presence in the open source arena, when it has been seriously threatened by open source virtualization offerings.

This week, though, Todd Weiss, writing on Linux.com, discussed how many analysts see the move as allowing VMware to tie virtualization directly to applications without requiring a separate operating system. Could VMware have its eye on the fast-growing Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) arena, aiming to deliver virtualized apps that users and IT administrators can hop in and out of without a tie to a parent OS??



OSS Could Be Key in Leveling Stock Market Playing Field

While there have been some questionable strategies playing out on Wall Street recently, and the Securities and Exchange Commission continues to scrutinize the legalities of a few high frequency trading techniques, former NYSE chairman William H. Donaldson's statement to New York Times holds true: if an individual investor can't keep up with larger brokerages, it's a major disadvantage.

Marketcetera feels that open source software is an ideal way for smaller brokerages to keep up with -- and perhaps outmaneuver -- their larger competition. Marketcetera CEO Graham Miller sees open source hosted/SaaS (software as a service) trading platforms as having particular potential for investors using high frequency trading methods. And Miller isn't the only one who believes this -- the evidence is vibrantly illustrated by Sky Road LLC's integration of Marketcetera's open source, automated trading platform into its SaaS financial services product line.



Open-Xchange Finds Free Webmail Promotion Boosting Its Bottom Line

Maybe it's not a completely counterintuitive concept that giving away a service can yield new business relationships and profits, but undoubtedly, actually doing so is still a leap of faith. It was a chance that Open-Xchange felt was worth taking when it announced it would be giving away its webmail module to qualifying telecom, non-profit, and educational organizations. Almost three months later, Open-Xchange is seeing that giving a little bit can bring good returns.

Open-Xchange's ongoing Webmail4Free promotion offers a free (in speech and cost) webmail module in exchange for marketing the company's open source groupware and mobility modules to the qualifying organization's users and signing a support agreement. The agreement terms vary depending on the organization's size and scope.

It's working out for Open-Xchange, which is reporting a rosier Q1 than expected, and has seen a number of new partnerships and customers thanks to the promotion.



Working on a Web-Hosted Project? Here are 10 Dependable Hosts

As more and more open source projects are focused on the cloud and software-as-a service (SaaS) models, there is a premium on reliable online hosting infrastructure, and dependable providers. Where can you find the best providers? Netcraft has posted its Top 10 list of the most reliable hosting company sites for March 2009. Are you familiar with ReliableServers, and Hosting4Less? Not all of the companies on Netcraft's Top 10 list are household names, but they beat out all others in reliability tests, and it's also notable that almost all of these elite hosting companies run open source operating systems.


OStatic Buffer Overflow

Top 50 Linux alternatives to MS apps. Look for the best apps by category.

7 questions to evaluate SaaS. Software as a Service is on the rise, in and out of the open source arena. Here's a checklist for evaluating SaaS apps.

VMware shows a two-OS tablet. At a conference, executives showed a Nokia N800 running Windows CE and Google Android using virtualization.

Android gathers development steam. Black Duck Software says the iPhone brought on 266 OSS releases during 2008, while Android followed with 191.

Open source for hard times. Nine free open source apps for use while you endure your job hunt.

Your own YouTube. Like Magnify.net, Fliggo lets you deliver your own video community site.?



SaaS Hasn't Killed Open Source: Can Open Source Help SaaS Evolve?

Ben Kepes at Cloud Ave. offers some interesting analysis of a question Yuuguu CEO Anish Kapoor recently tackled on his company's blog: Has software as a service (SaaS) killed open source as a business model?

The question raised, of course, is why these concepts are at odds at all -- why are they mutually exclusive? They aren't, per se (SaaS companies can -- and do -- offer their code under open licenses), but Kapoor imagines that for some companies, SaaS takes a bit of the shine from open source. Kepes counters that while this might be the case, SaaS has a fair bit to gain from the open source model.



Google Squashes the Rumor: Announces Native Client Technology

Though the majority of companies have policies pertaining to responding to speculation, sometimes it just gets to a point they have to. For instance, say a rumor makes the rounds (with at least some supporting evidence) that Google has something up its sleeve that might possibly have to do with an operating system. Google can keep mum for a while, but it obviously has to be formally addressed, sooner or later.

It's unclear whether Google originally intended on announcing its Native Code Project last night, or if it hoped it could squeak out some more prep time before anyone noticed something was afoot. Either way, Google has unveiled Native Client, a technology that Google says will give web developers the full power of the client's CPU while maintaining browser safety, complete portability, and safety. And yes, it is open source.



Operating System Grist for the Google Rumor Mill

Last week, Net Applications reported Microsoft's operating system share had fallen below the 90 percent mark on the 40,000 or so websites where it gathers its traffic statistics. InternetNews is reporting that Net Applications made another interesting, if puzzling, discovery.

It seems the statistics gathered from Google.com (this only includes Google employees -- not the public using the search engine) were showing that a third of these users were accessing sites with an unknown operating system. It's more interesting when you consider that proxy servers block all identifying information, but the Google.com unknown systems only had the operating system information obscured.

Theories abound, of course, as to what Google might have up its sleeve. There's the Google is bringing Android to the PC school of thought, and the networking application infrastructure development theory.



In a SaaS World, Does Source Code Take a Back Seat to Services?

There have been strong signs recently that open source has a promising place in the software-as-a-service (SaaS) arena. Alistair Croll, in a post over on GigaOm.com, has a good discussion of how irrelevant source code itself can become in the world of software-driven services.

Even the open-source movement is feeling the change, he notes. Recent modifications to the third revision of the GNU Public License recognize that it?s the service, not the source code, that has value. Check out Alistair's thoughts on the relative value of app tone versus the value of the underlying code for service-oriented applications.


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