Supplier News: 9/5/2015

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IBM is ensuring they are the major player for internet of things by helping create a standardized ecosystem.  HP is looking to sell off a company and move some of their employees to staffing firms.  VMWare continues to be presented as the future of EMC. Meanwhile, Oracle is trying to avoid having their executives sued.

IBM

  • IBM and ARM Collaborate to Accelerate Delivery of Internet of Things

    IBM today announced an expansion of its Internet of Things (IoT) platform called IBM IoT Foundation – through an integration with ARM, providing out of the box connectivity with ARM® mbed”-enabled devices to analytics services. This fusion will allow huge quantities of data from devices such as industrial appliances, weather sensors and wearable monitoring devices to be gathered, analyzed and acted upon.

    http://seekingalpha.com/pr/14575766-ibm-and-arm-collaborate-to-accelerate-delivery-of-internet-of-things
    More on the partnership:

    There are plenty of clouds that want to store your connected data, but IBM is making the case that it has everything developers need in one reputable cloud. IoT Foundations has the IBM brand, new capabilities announced Thursday to handle data analytics (it uses a variation of the Spark real-time data processing standard) and device management capabilities. The link with ARM should help the engineers at a big name company or startup so they don’t have to worry about the mechanics of connecting their device to the Internet and offloading the data. Instead, they can just make it happen with a few clicks on a cloud dashboard.

    http://fortune.com/2015/09/03/arm-ibm-iot/

  • IBM partners PH firm Ionics Inc to create Internet-of-Things platform

    The Philippine listed firm disclosed that one of its units Ionics EMS Inc, a local electronics manufacturing services provider, is working with IBM as “a key design partner” to launch the IBM IoT Platform. The latter is meant to enable organizations across industries to improve engagement with clients, accelerate technology innovation and enhance business operations.

    http://www.dealstreetasia.com/stories/ibm-partners-ph-firm-ionics-inc-to-create-internet-of-things-platform-11562/

  • Half a Century Later Mainframes, Together with Linux, Still Run Much of Today’s Infrastructure

    These platform innovations have enabled mainframes to incorporate major advances in technology and keep evolving over the years. This was the case with the transition to microprocessors and the parallel sysplex architecture, without which IBM would not have survived its near-death experience in the early 1990s. A few years later, mainframes embraced TCP/IP and just about all Internet standards, integrating seamlessly with the Internet and World Wide Web, and enabling its customers to leverage their existing transaction and data base applications in all kinds of new e-business solutions. Then came zLinux, which made it possible to easily port just about any Linux application to mainframes.

    http://blogs.wsj.com/cio/2015/09/04/half-a-century-later-mainframes-together-with-linux-still-run-much-of-todays-infrastructure/

  • IBM Watson Health Commercial
  • Ogilvy and Watson Have Big Things Planned for IBM

    Sources close to the matter tell us that Ogilvy’s creative team has been hard at work on a larger effort set to debut later this fall. Specifics are scarce at the moment, but we hear that the new campaign will be more “corporate” than the work in this post and that its ultimate goal is a complete refresh/rebranding of the IBM name.

    http://www.adweek.com/agencyspy/ogilvy-and-watson-have-big-things-planned-for-ibm/92748

  • Did IBM Just Get Hacked at DEF CON?

    In the presentation–which Kulach says is aimed at helping users to secure an IBM i system from the perspective of an external and internal intruder–purports to show a series of techniques for compromising the system, including “privilege escalation by nested user switching, getting full system access via JDBC, bypassing the ‘green screen’ (5250) limitations,” and how to get direct access to password hashes through an undocumented API.

    http://www.itjungle.com/tfh/tfh090215-story01.html
    There is a big “but” (the presentation is being called a red herring:

    But to pull off Kulach’s approach to hacking an IBM i server would require such a poorly configured IBM i server that it just strains the credulity of the premise.

  • ANZ signs $450m IT deal with IBM
    Time to be on the lookout for these “baseball” contracts that IBM likes to announce in the 4th Q…
    http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/583529/anz-signs-450m-it-deal-ibm/

Oracle

Hewlett Packard

EMC

Other

  • Wipro hires Ankur Prakash, another TCS executive

    TCS veteran Ankur Prakash, who was previously the COO of the company’s Latin America business, has now been mandated to lead Wipro’s emerging markets business, a role in which he will report directly to Neemuchwala, according to two people directly familiar with the development. Both of them requested anonymity.

    http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/ites/wipro-hires-ankur-prakash-another-tcs-executive/articleshow/48737538.cms

  • Windows 10 Is Great, but Microsoft Can’t Save the PC

    But for device makers, the situation could be quite different. Later this year, Hewlett-Packard will cleave itself in two, creating two separate companies focused on different businesses. One of those firms — HP — will derive around half of its revenue from sales of traditional PCs. If PC shipments continue to decline, that company could be devastated. Earlier this month, when Hewlett-Packard turned in third quarter earnings, its PC-related revenue contracted more than 13%.

    http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2015/08/31/windows-10-is-great-but-microsoft-cant-save-the-pc.aspx

  • Businesses are buying analytics software even if investors aren’t

    There are some wrinkles to iron out as the world adjusts to a trend toward open source and freemium business models, and to business software that individuals can buy. But there’s a huge opportunity for companies to cash in on business demand for better data analysis, and the young companies that live and breathe data seem the best positioned to cash in.

    http://fortune.com/2015/09/04/tableau-splunk-hortonworks-revenue-investors/

  • Salesforce jumps into health care with a tailored cloud platform

    Aiming to help healthcare organizations manage their relationships with patients, the company’s new Salesforce Health Cloud promises providers a complete view of each patient as well as the ability to engage them better across caregiver networks. Overall, the goal is to help providers make smarter patient-care decisions, the company said.

    http://www.cio.com/article/2979584/salesforce-jumps-into-healthcare-with-a-tailored-cloud-platform.html

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