Enterprise vendors increasingly dominate the open source software scene
The open source revolution, chugging along for two decades now, is still going strong -- and is now a huge industry, led by large, non-open-source vendors.
The open source revolution, chugging along for two decades now, is still going strong -- and is now a huge industry, led by large, non-open-source vendors.
Analyst: Java is the foundation of Hadoop, the hottest clustering software around today.
Java's travails have been well documented. Could .NET also suffer a similar fate?
The dot-oh syndrome stirs something deep within all of us; that nagging need to keep up and not get left behind. Windows 95 users know that feeling all too well by now.
If Charles Schulz were still around writing "Peanuts," would Lucy be taunting Charlie Brown in online venues, instead of in person? Would Linus be using Linux?
Commercial software vendors talk SOA; open-sourcers talk SOA. 'Mashup' time!
Service Component Architecture and Windows Communication Foundation are working toward the same end: SOA.
Just last week, I commented how BEA is really churning out the goods this summer. In June, the vendor announced its AquaLogic tools, and last week began shipping an ESB.
SOAP or REST? Maybe a little of both.
Java community embraces SOA, but says there's even a place for C++ as well.