- Five Mobile Trends I'll Be Watching
- Oracle cooks up free and premium JVMs • The Register
Another tech world story broke and sourced by Twitter. - Why you can't move a mainframe with a cloud • The Register
"With IBM beginning its ramp of the System zEnterprise 196 servers in September – the machines were announced in July – all of the players in the mainframe racket are hoping to have quite a few quarters of increasing sales as the estimated 6,000 to 7,000 mainframe shops in the world go through their next upgrade cycle." - Apple signs Xserve death warrant • reghardware
"Instead, it hopes folk wanting to run Mac OS X Server will adopt either its Mac Pro or Mac Mini desktops, both of which are available in server configurations with extra hard drives and no optical units." - (Some of) My favourite bloggers
Thanks for the kind words! - Silverlight Questions – ScottGu's Blog
- PDC 2010: Top 5 Reasons Why Microsoft Completely Screwed up their web strategy with HTML 5
- Feature: Silverlight, HTML5, and Microsoft's opaque development strategy
It won't die. - Oracle submits cloud interoperability API | ZDNet
Hot DMTF action! - Alfresco Software's John Newton on the New Wave of Engagement
Some good vision questing for CMS folks. Your content is your storefront, as we like to say at RedMonk Ranch. - VMware exec: Cloud computing is a certainty | Cloud Computing – InfoWorld
Rod gets aggressive on cloud certainty. - Adobe MAX 2010 – it’s all about the partners « Tim Anderson’s ITWriting
"The key difference [between Adobe and Microsoft in the RIA space] at this point is not technical, but all about partners. At MAX we saw how the Flash runtime is integral to the Blackberry PlayBook, with RIM founder Mike Lazaridis coming on stage to tell us so. Flash is also built into Google TV, and Andres Ferrate and Daniels Lee from Google Developer Relations presented a session on creating web apps for the platform – worth watching as it brings out the difference between developing for a TV “lean back” environment and traditional mouse or touch user interfaces – and we also heard from Samsung about its Flash-enabled TVs coming in 2011. In each case, it is not just Flash but AIR, for applications that run outside the browser, which is supported. Google TV runs Android; and AIR for Android in general drew attention at MAX, encouraged by free Motorola Droid 2 smartphones handed out to attendees." - BIRT Downloads Surpass 10 Million With Over One Million Developers Using BIRT Worldwide
"Actuate has generated over $55 million in BIRT-related business." Also, they changed their stock ticker to BIRT. - PDC and Silverlight
"Silverlight will continue to be invested in across the board. It is the way to build Apps for Windows Phone 7, but it is also and will continue to be the best solution for premium media experiences and business applications both inside and outside the browser on Windows and the Mac." –Brian Goldfarb, in the comments - Adobe closes Flash-based Flex to outsiders • The Register
Adobe closing up Flex. An open Flex gives too much visibility into the closed Flash, the seem to be saying. - New Analyst Report Evaluates BMC Software in IT Operations Management
- Financial Times declares an end to the Smartphone Wars
Really liking this guys style. - Setting our own Direction; Ben and I to move on from Palm on Dion Almaer's Blog
Disclosure: see the RedMonk client list for clients mentioned.
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