Wednesday, November 19, 2008

What’s new: SAP sees opportunity (FT.com)

What’s new: SAP sees opportunity
By Geoff Nairn

Published: November 19 2008 10:50 | Last updated: November 19 2008 10:50

Times are hard and while some vendors see only challenges, SAP sees opportunities. The German giant has designed a new range of software to help cash-strapped businesses shore up their bottom line through greater operational efficiencies and cost savings.

Called Best-Run Now, these offerings cover areas such as energy management, procurement, cash and risk management, workforce management and business planning. Rounding out the range is a business intelligence ”accelerator” and a package for reducing IT operational costs.

Office productivity

Another product for today’s cost-conscious times: IBM is pushing Lotus Symphony, its reborn office productivity suite, as a free and open source alternative to Microsoft Office.

IBM is particularly keen to win over businesses with lots of ”task users”, who perhaps do not need the sprawling functionality of Office. Unlike Lotus SmartSuite, its predecessor, Symphony is free and is based on OpenOffice, so it is compatible with Microsoft Office. IBM also released a beta version of Symphony for the Apple Mac.

Fujitsu foothold

Fujitsu may not be a household name to enterprise customers outside Japan. But that could change with Siemens’ decision to sell Fujitsu its half share in their long-running joint venture, Fujitsu Siemens Computers. Fujitsu hopes the move will gain it a bigger foothold in Europe for its high-end hardware, the latest being the Sparc Enterprise M2000, an entry-level server based on the quad-core Sparc64 VII processor, which Sun also uses. Pricing starts at $15,000 for an M2000 running Sun Solaris 10.

Audit automated

Compliance can be a real headache for IT departments. Sun claims to have the remedy in Sun Identity Compliance Manager, which seeks to automate the time-consuming tasks associated with controlling, reporting and auditing who has access to what data and applications inside an organisation. Pricing starts $75,000 plus an undisclosed small fee for each user.

Configuration automated

More on the compliance front, this time from storage giant EMC. Its Server Configuration Manager product lets IT departments automatically discover and maintain detailed server configuration data, and includes pre-packaged compliance toolkits for regulations such as Sox, Hipaa and others. Companion product, EMC Configuration Analytics Manager, turns this raw data into useful business information on compliance and IT service levels.

Offer of protection

Sprint Nextel is offering US businesses protection from network-borne threats. As well as standard services such as web filtering, antivirus and malware scanning, Sprint’s Secure Web Protection also includes web application control, so allowing business to monitor suspect peer-to-peer or instant messaging traffic. Businesses can sign up for a network-based service or a premises-based option, which uses hardware and software from Blue Coat Systems.

Google SLA extended

It’s not quite five nines reliability, but what do you expect for $50? Google has extended the service level agreement its offers to paying users of its Gmail webmail service to cover its other hosted applications – Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Sites and Google Talk. The SLA covers businesses and organisations that sign up for Google Apps Premier Edition, which costs $50 a year for each user. If uptime falls below 99.9 per cent, extra days are credited to the account. The free version of Google Apps does not come with an SLA.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008

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