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Shape Your Swing the Modern Way (Classics of Golf)»rank: 838297by: Byron Nelson, Larry Dennis
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Roseburg 1959»rank: 1695229by: George Byron Wright
: :On August 7, 1959, at 1:14 a.m., a truckload of explosives blows up, gutting twelve square blocks of downtown Roseburg, Oregon. Ross Bagby stands at the edge the conflagration unaware that his so-called life has also just gone up in the flames. Ross s often humiliating marriage to the granddaughter of timber baron Jonah Armbruster is already an exercise of placid endurance. But when war hero Colonel Gordon Butler McKenzie, the figurehead director of the Armbruster charitable foundation, is with the wrong woman when the town explodes, Ross inherits complications he could never have imagined. A piece of shrapnel puts the Colonel in a coma and Ross, as his assistant, ... |
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The 2004 IDC Professional Developer Model»rank: 1695229by: IDC, Stephen D. Hendrick, Dennis Byron, David Emberley
: :This IDC study discusses the IDC Professional Developer Model, which presents a methodology for estimating the number of professional developers worldwide and in over 190 countries and the results of the model for 2001–2008. Vendors can use this study to help make decisions about where to focus marketing efforts for products used by developers. 'In our 2004 iteration of the IDC Professional Developer Model, we see continuing indication that professional-developer hiring is a leading indicator of software spending growth,' said Dennis Byron, IDC Application Deployment Software research analyst. 'It is much like the way in which 'tool and die' economic activity indicated up and downs in manufacturing in the United ... |
2006 CMO Tech Marketing Barometer: Marketing Leaders' Formula for Success»rank: 1695229by: Dennis Byron, Ron Glaz, Bob O'Donnell
: :This IDC study on technology marketing spending and resource priorities discusses the results of a recent survey of 47 technology firms within the software, hardware, services, and telecommunications sectors. The analysis provides a detailed evaluation of expected shifts in marketing budgets and prioritization of marketing objectives and identifies keys for success for marketing executives during 2006. Key performance indicators (KPIs) from IDC's CMO Advisory Technology Marketing Benchmarks database are also included to help guide IDC clients in their marketing investment and allocation decisions. 'Tech marketing budgets are forecast to increase by 7% in 2006, outpacing growth in global IT spending for the third year in a row — an indication ... |
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AMD's Dual-Core Offerings Come to Market and Dilute the Megahertz Race»rank: 1695229by: IDC, Lloyd Cohen, John Humphreys, Dennis Byron
: :This IDC Flash looks at AMD's official introduction — on April 21, 2005, as the company celebrated the second anniversary of AMD Opteron — of its first dual-core processor. AMD will begin shipping dual-core Opteron processors immediately in the 800 series, followed by the 200 series in late May 2005. This document summarizes the announcement from AMD and discusses the significance of dual-core technology to the x86 workstation market. This announcement serves as further reinforcement of AMD's efforts to drive acceptance of an alternative to the Intel x86 road map in 64-bit computing. |
The Application Deployment Software Opportunity of the Next Decade: What Might Happen If 20% of the Software Market Were Unbundled into Middleware»rank: 1695229by: IDC, Dennis Byron
: :This IDC study is a 'what if' look at what might potentially happen over the current forecast period (through 2009) and into the 2010–2019 decade if application deployment software were to replace packaged applications and enterprise application components as the fulcrum for software market growth. Application deployment software is a secondary market as defined in IDC's Software Taxonomy, 2005 (IDC #32884, February 2005). It is the aggregate of application server software platform, integration server software platform, Web server software, message-oriented middleware, transaction-server middleware, and all the associated adapters and connectors that work with such software. Such a change in the software market fulcrum is possible if various technology, channel, industry-centric, ... |
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Application Deployment Software User Status and Plans, 2004-2005: On Demand or Not, Open Source or Not, Middleware Is Still a Software Type Users Cannot Do Without»rank: 1695229by: IDC, Dennis Byron
: :This document is about Application Deployment Software User Status and Plans, 2004-2005: On Demand or Not, Open Source or Not, Middleware Is Still a Software Type Users Cannot Do Without |
An Assessment of the TeleManagement Forum's eTOM Model»rank: 1695229by: Dennis Byron
: :This IDC study provides an overview and assessment of the TeleManagement Forum's eTOM model and discusses challenges and opportunities associated with its acceptance among the vendor and service provider communities. 'Acceptance of the eTOM has been slow, but IDC believes that interest from service providers is on the rise, driven by the flexibility of the model and increased awareness of the efficiency gains and cost savings that standardization can bring to operational support systems,' says Shira Levine, senior analyst, Next-Generation OSS and Billing. |
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BEA AquaLogic: BEA Joins the 'Open Choice' Application Deployment Software Movement»rank: 1695229by: Dennis Byron
: :This IDC Insight looks at the implications to the application deployment software market of the June 9, 2005, BEA announcement of BEA's AquaLogic product family. The new family spans more than the application deployment software market, but the foundation of the announcement is the rollout of the message-bus-based product development effort formerly code-named Quicksilver, and the promise that the AquaLogic family will include future integration server software platform (ISSP) deliverables for business process composition and automation. |
BEA Expands Portfolio with Plumtree Acquisition: Composite Application Development and Deployment Strategy Begins to Solidify»rank: 1695229by: Brian McDonough, Dennis Byron
: :This IDC Insight looks at the implications to the application deployment software market of the June 9, 2005, BEA announcement of BEA's AquaLogic product family. The new family spans more than the application deployment software market, but the foundation of the announcement is the rollout of the message-bus-based product development effort formerly code-named Quicksilver, and the promise that the AquaLogic family will include future integration server software platform (ISSP) deliverables for business process composition and automation. |