The telephone and visitors are the work destroyers.
–Hemingway
Hemingway on interruptions
The telephone and visitors are the work destroyers.
–Hemingway
People stuck in the email backwoods
Only 8% of office system users employ cloud-hosted email and desktop applications, according to analyst company Gartner Gartner expects that 10% of enterprise email inboxes will be hosted in the cloud by the end of 2014. ...adoption will accelerate from the first half to 2015, reaching 33% penetartiong in 2017 and 60% by 2022
–Just 8% of workers use cloud for office apps
These figures - which I pretty much believe - always baffle me.
People stuck in the email backwoods
Only 8% of office system users employ cloud-hosted email and desktop applications, according to analyst company Gartner Gartner expects that 10% of enterprise email inboxes will be hosted in the cloud by the end of 2014. ...adoption will accelerate from the first half to 2015, reaching 33% penetartiong in 2017 and 60% by 2022
–Just 8% of workers use cloud for office apps
These figures - which I pretty much believe - always baffle me.
Progress enabling SaaSify
“Our ISV customers have said, we want to be able to compete in the cloud,” explains CEO Philip Pead.
So Progress also announced that it would be gradually moving its software components into the cloud, to create an all new "platform-as-a-service" offering.
– Progress Software buys a new front end for its PaaS play
You see this a lot: companies help "SaaSify" applications. Progress more than likely had a pretty broad, long standing base of companies using it's various middleware chunks.
Progress enabling SaaSify
“Our ISV customers have said, we want to be able to compete in the cloud,” explains CEO Philip Pead.
So Progress also announced that it would be gradually moving its software components into the cloud, to create an all new "platform-as-a-service" offering.
– Progress Software buys a new front end for its PaaS play
You see this a lot: companies help "SaaSify" applications. Progress more than likely had a pretty broad, long standing base of companies using it's various middleware chunks.
The Joys of Marginalia
I can’t really concentrate on reading unless I have a pen in my hand. I love marginalia. I love used books and getting a glimpse of some stranger’s relationship to a book that is now in my life. I underline, star, box, vent, exclaim. I like rereading my books and seeing coffee stains or chocolaty fingerprints I left behind the last time I read them. --The Joys of Marginalia
The Joys of Marginalia
I can’t really concentrate on reading unless I have a pen in my hand. I love marginalia. I love used books and getting a glimpse of some stranger’s relationship to a book that is now in my life. I underline, star, box, vent, exclaim. I like rereading my books and seeing coffee stains or chocolaty fingerprints I left behind the last time I read them. --The Joys of Marginalia
OpenStack vs. Amazon
The differentiation [between Amazon and OpenStack] is that OpenStack technology is driving an initiative, throughout the world, which can be adopted and molded in a non-proprietary way. If you, as a user, want to integrate some proprietary technology into OpenStack, you can do that very easily. It's basically an open system. The companies and brand names you trust are there to make sure the technology works in a reference architecture.
OpenStack vs. Amazon
The differentiation [between Amazon and OpenStack] is that OpenStack technology is driving an initiative, throughout the world, which can be adopted and molded in a non-proprietary way. If you, as a user, want to integrate some proprietary technology into OpenStack, you can do that very easily. It's basically an open system. The companies and brand names you trust are there to make sure the technology works in a reference architecture.