tech
Posted Friday, 25 January 2008
From the Register: Nokia has achieved a new milestone by posting a 40.2 percent share of the global mobile phone market.
This is a massive market, as mobile phone adoption continues to surpass personal computer sales in many regions. The estimated total shipments for 2007 was 1.13 billion mobile phones, with a 12 percent growth forecast for 2008.
Results for the fourth quarter of 2007 were as follows, according to a press release from Strategy Analytics. Figures are in millions of units:
2.3: Apple iPhone
23.7: LG
30.8: Sony Ericsson
40.9: Motorola
46.9: Samsung
133.5: Nokia
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ism tech
Posted Friday, 25 January 2008
Yesterday I mentioned Sun’s acquistion of MySQL, a leading open source database company. BusinessWeek published an article about Oracle’s acquistion of middleware vendor BEA Systems. That deal has been in the works for a year, according to IT-Director.com.
Shane Schick’s follow-up on the Oracle deal is a nice overview of why CXOs should care about middleware. Middleware is a translation layer that helps data move between different software packages and computer systems. Without middleware, e-commerce just doesn’t work very well.
Many companies have to link heterogenous information systems within their value chain. Even more companies have to link their value chains with those of their suppliers and customers, which means even more heterogeneity.
Oracle has a healthy chunk of the financial services middleware market. BEA provides access to other sectors, including telecommunications,where Oracle has not been competitive.
However, Oracle will have to spend time pruning and consolidating the combined product lines. Time may not be on their side, given the growing signs of economic recession in North America.
Amidst all of these developments, we should not forget that middleware and database software are important parts of data security. Cory Doctorow has described his radical view that data breaches are as bad as toxic waste and nuclear accidents. He has a good point – the effects might last for decades, and the companies that leaked the data might not bear the true costs.
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