| By WebLogic News Desk | Article Rating: |
|
| July 20, 2007 07:30 PM EDT | Reads: |
16,530 |
Renewed - or maybe the word is just louder since it's been pretty constant - speculation that BEA is up for grabs has Credit Suisse, for one, believing that the company is in play and that it could go for $15-$18 a share.It says, "While management may still be hesitant about selling the business, it's our opinion that they are rapidly losing the ability to influence the decision" - a situation that would be clinched by another weak quarter after the "April Q1 disappointment [that] was the spark that set a series of events in motion that should lead to a positive outcome for shareholders."
Credit Suisse analyst Jason Maynard thinks BEA will go to Oracle or private equity in the next three-six months, "not the often mentioned HP." A strategic buyer would pay a few bucks more, he thinks, than a financial buyer.
Microsoft Sprang October Surprise on Novell
Ahh, it seems that Novell didn't know until two weeks before its infamous deal with Microsoft was announced that there was a sine qua non patent component to the thing. The poor little innocent thought Microsoft was negotiating interoperability for the sake of interoperability until Microsoft had Novell salivating like Pavlov's dogs and then Microsoft explained the fact of life. We have this tale from someone who was there and says it's true.
Tealeaf Readers Claim Ubuntu's in HP's Cup
The gossip figures HP will go down the Dell path and start pre-installing Ubuntu on some of its consumer PCs and laptops.
Microsoft Rents Office 2007
Microsoft is using the pay-as-you-go pre-paid cell phone model to peddle Office 2007 on new machines in South Africa and Romania, charging about 30 bucks, according to Reuters, for a three-month subscription with three months thrown in for free for first-time users. It's expected to broaden the scheme out to other developing countries. It tested the concept out earlier this year with Office 2003 and Windows.
Mark Logic Raises Third Round
Mark Logic and its XML content server, which works with Red Hat, Windows Server 2003 and Solaris, closed a $15 million third round compliments of Sequoia Capital and Lehman Brothers. The money is meant to push sales.
Firefox Scorches Microsoft
Firefox has 27.8% of the European Union, according to XiTi Monitor and in Poland, Hungary and Croatia it's 39%. In Slovenia it's a devastating 47.9%. Meanwhile, Mozilla chief Mitchell Baker claims the browser has been downloaded by 15% of American Internet users and accounts for 20% of US Internet usage. Worldwide the number is supposed to be 100 million people. Of course that doesn't mean exclusive use.
IBM Research Boss Retires
The head of IBM's research unit Paul Horn is retiring after 11 years in the job to become a scientist-in-residence at New York University and will be replaced by John Kelly, who's been overseeing IBM's strategies on technical standards and IP.
WebLayer Raises C Round
WebLayers has gotten $7 million in Series C funding from Ascent Venture Partners, Cedar Fund and Veritas Venture Partners. It claims to be the only game in town with a platform-independent policy management system that automates the manual governance required throughout the SOA lifecycle. The money is meant to expand sales, extend its professional services and expand its ability to deliver enterprise-class products.
Published July 20, 2007 Reads 16,530
Copyright © 2007 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By WebLogic News Desk
WLDJ News Desk trawls the world of e-commerce technologies for news and innovations and presents IT professionals with updates on WebLogic related technology trends, products, and services.
![]() |
BEA News Desk 07/20/07 07:37:17 PM EDT | |||
Renewed - or maybe the word is just louder since it's been pretty constant - speculation that BEA is up for grabs has Credit Suisse, for one, believing that the company is in play and that it could go for $15-$18 a share. It says, 'While management may still be hesitant about selling the business, it's our opinion that they are rapidly losing the ability to influence the decision' - a situation that would be clinched by another weak quarter after the 'April Q1 disappointment [that] was the spark that set a series of events in motion that should lead to a positive outcome for shareholders.' |
||||
- Building Private and Hybrid Clouds with Ubuntu 9.04
- Reality Check at the Cloud Expo
- Virtualization Expo New York Call for Papers to Expire January 15, 2010
- Forget Defining Cloud Computing
- What is Enterprise Cloud Computing?
- Current Trends in the Data Management Market
- TIBCO Goes to IBM Before the End of March 2010 -Prediction
- Java vs C++? Really?
- Economy Drives Adoption of Virtual Lab Technology
- How PowerBuilder Got Its Groove Back
- Adaptivity “Platinum Plus Sponsor” of Cloud Expo
- Cloud Computing Defined
- Building Private and Hybrid Clouds with Ubuntu 9.04
- Reality Check at the Cloud Expo
- Virtualization Expo New York Call for Papers to Expire January 15, 2010
- The End of IT 1.0 As We Know It Has Begun
- Forget Defining Cloud Computing
- What is Enterprise Cloud Computing?
- IBM Could "Reinvent" Java: Mills
- Why SOA Needs Cloud Computing - Part 1
- The Transition to Cloud Computing: What Does It Mean For You?
- Reflections on Java Command Line Options
- Current Trends in the Data Management Market
- A Security Analysis of Cloud Computing
- Java vs C++ "Shootout" Revisited
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- WebSphere Application Server Java Dumps
- Breaking News: New Internal IBM Report Says "Another Flawed Study"
- Last Exclusive JDJ Interview With "IBM's" John A. Swainson, Now CA's Newly Appointed CEO
- How To Deploy Scalable WebSphere Applications Using "Maven" Build Tool
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- Developing Java and Web Services Applications on Rational Application Developer V6
- Your Guide to Portal Clustering in WebSphere Portal Server 5.1
- Automated Deployment of Enterprise Application Updates
- Profiles for WebSphere Application Server 6.0
- Putting IBM's WAS On Unix - WebSphere Application Server



























