Ellison’s Oracle HCM Chat Turns To Rivals, Hawaii

Larry Ellison’s Oracle human capital management keynote results in questions on IBM, SAP, games, and island real estate. 16 Top Big Data Analytics Platforms (Click image for larger view and slideshow.) After a whole day of sessions at Oracle HCM World in Las Vegas and a one-hour keynote by Larry Ellison, perhaps it is just not surprising that among the HR professionals in attendance desired to ask the fame CEO questions on topics except human capital management. Ellison was only too happy to oblige, talking about acquisitions, competitors, acquisitions, games, and his plans for the island of Lanai in Hawaii, which he bought in 2012 for an estimated $500 million. Of course, topic A for Ellison throughout his “Modern HCM is Social HCM” keynote was Oracle HCM, the socially enabled application suite that Oracle lately touts as its fastest-growing cloud computing offering. Ellison called HCM and customer-experience apps an important systems at any company or government agency because they facilitate communications and manage the crucial information... Read More »

How Enterprises Can Plan For Wearables

CIOs have to stay previous to the wave by staking a claim inside the wearables ecosystem through apps and always be asking: What do employees and customers need from wearables? By now, everyone from techies to gamers to athletes has heard that wearables are “the following big thing.” As a 20-year veteran of the technology industry, I’ve seen the emergence of latest next-gen technologies come and go – from the shopper server to the desktop, to PCs and laptops, to the present mobile era. Look at today’s wearables and you will notice something quite remarkable this time around. What makes this latest wave of hardware exponentially more exciting than other evolutions is the connectivity with the cloud. Due to the cloud, devices like Google Glass and Fitbit have access to geolocation information, your past history, the net, plus the facility to record, broadcast and post to social media. [Google Glass and other easy-to-use wearables stress importance of user-friendliness. Read What Google Glass Can Teach IT]... Read More »

Microsoft CEOs’ Wackiest Quotes: Who Said That?

Satya Nadella has the brains and experience to become Microsoft’s CEO — but does he have the pointy tongue of Gates or Ballmer? Match these Microsoft CEO quotes to their outspoken owners. Microsoft In 2013: 7 Lessons Learned (Click image for larger view and for slideshow.) Microsoft’s new CEO Satya Nadella has some big shoes to fill. He faces great expectations with regards to innovation and profit, his predecessors set the bar very high, yada yada yada… But that is not what I’m talking about. Microsoft’s new leader will play follow-as much as two of one of the most prolifically quotable CEOs in history. Nadella, displaying a passion for cricket, a powerful intellect, and a borderline-hipster wardrobe, is already carving out an identity. But he has nothing at the cult of personality that formed around Gates. When a satirical website claimed the Microsoft founder told a reporter, “I provide you with 1,000,000 bucks, and that i get to sever your arm here,” and “Let’s accept... Read More »

Big Data Reaches Inflection Point

Enterprises see the sunshine on big data opportunities. It is only an issue of time before mainstream data-management environments evolve. What’s the status of the large data revolution? Fresh clues emerged with week with Hadoop vendor Cloudera scoring a $160 million round a chance capital funding, big data analytics company Platfora getting a $38 million capital infusion, and Allied Market Research issuing an estimate that the $2 billion Hadoop ecosystem (as measured in 2013) will quickly grow to $50 billion by 2020. Citing that heady $50 billion stat, Rob Bearden, CEO of Cloudera-rival Hortonworks, said that he expects see “60%, 70%, 80%” of enterprise data stepping into Hadoop over the approaching years. Speaking at this week’s GigaOM Structure Data big data event in Long island, Bearden said Hadoop changes the economics of managing data, giving companies a sought-after “single platform that manages all data types and structures.” Structure keynoter Paul Maritz, CEO of EMC-spinoff Pivotal, said his company is targeted on making Hadoop enterprise-ready so... Read More »

PaaS, Present & Future: Developers Will Decide

Platform-as-a-service differs from IaaS. IBM’s Ric Telford predicts what we’ll see because it matures in the course of the next two years. More than two years ago I wrote the blog post “PaaS Comes Of Age,” where I posited we were entering a platform-as-a-service era — one by which platform services would become the critical cloud capability for enterprises. a whole lot has happened since I wrote that post, and now we’re seeing this “coming of age” story continue into maturity. For the uninitiated, PaaS could be considered a delivery model for functionality you traditionally go along with middleware. Not so coincidently, it also sits inside the “middle” of the cloud stack, between infrastructure-as-a-service and software-as-a-service. PaaS can deliver any combination of application “development” and “runtime” services from the cloud, in some sort of measured model (subscription, pay-as-you-go, etc). Today there are quite a number of PaaS services, such a lot of that it’s hard to maintain them straight. Many companies have converged in this... Read More »