Saturday, 27 July 2013

Are we in an enterprise startup bubble?

The open source job market is booming

In the cloud, code doesn't need developers

InfoWorld Daily AM
July 27, 2013
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Are we in an enterprise startup bubble?

This year, enterprises will spend more than $2.5 trillion on IT. You can forgive VCs for wanting a piece, but the real market is much, much smaller.

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Issue highlights

1. The open source job market is booming

2. In the cloud, code doesn't need developers

3. Happy birthday, OpenStack -- but don't get too comfortable

4. Mark Shuttleworth takes his case for the Ubuntu Edge to Reddit

Resource compliments of: Red Hat

Red Hat Enterprise Linux - A Platform without Boundaries

Businesses that depend on innovation have one thing in common: They have built their technology foundations to be open, not closed. These businesses run on Red Hat® Enterprise Linux®. It's time to experience what IT can do with no proprietary limits, vendor-imposed constraints, or boundaries to innovation. Learn more now

The open source job market is booming

Apparently, the notion of free software has not killed off job opportunities in the software space. Open source software is in fact creating numerous job opportunities, if the multitude of companies hiring at this week's OSCON (O'Reilly Open Source Convention) are any indication. READ MORE

In the cloud, code doesn't need developers

Codeless development environments, which rely on models and templates for building applications rather than strict coding, are gaining a foothold. READ MORE

Happy birthday, OpenStack -- but don't get too comfortable

The tech world has accepted OpenStack, but most enterprises looking at cloud computing still have questions around the long-term viability and the maturity of the standard. READ MORE

Mark Shuttleworth takes his case for the Ubuntu Edge to Reddit

The Canonical founder discusses the merits of crowdfunding its superphone, how open the device will be, and whether users should worry about government surveillance. READ MORE

White Paper: Network Instruments

Getting Ahead Managing VoIP and Videoconferencing

Can the move to UC be just another simple technology transition? End users expect these technologies to look, act and behave just as their non-IP predecessors. But for IT teams it brings very real, new requirements. Learn VoIP and video success strategies from Jim Frey, an Enterprise Management Associates analyst. Learn more.

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