
OSGi at Adobe: New School technology
Tweet [insert image here. i need to find a good one ] i am at an Adobe event in San Jose for the analyst unveiling of the company’s Customer Experience Management platform and strategy. Rather than focusing on CEM for this post, which I talked to indepth already here, I thought I would nerd out […]

TIBCO BPM Now and Future: iProcess, Meet ActiveMatrix BPM
The session that I’ve been waiting all day for is with Roger King, who runs BPM product management and strategy for TIBCO, where he discussed the new ActiveMatrix BPM and TIBCOSilver BPM offerings for on-premise and cloud deployments. They’ve been working on this for a couple of years, and obviously keen to get it out […]

Hacking UK Politics with IBM Middleware: open data, mashups, and uh… WebSphere
One of my favourite app of recent times is Ben Marsh’s UKSnow, which uses people as sensors, and twitter as the collection mechanism – to track and visualise snowfall across the UK. So it was cool to come across a similar app of that tracks people’s likely voting preferences in the UK general election. Step […]

Can Paremus Make OSGi Nimble?
One of the great unsolved Java problems is a lack of modularity. OSGi is a technology designed to solve the problem. Wikipedia says:
The OSGi framework is a module system and service platform for the Java programming language that implements a complete and dynamic component model, something that does not exist in standalone Java/VM […]

Java in 2010: Bringing in the Receivers
I have little if any insider insight into Oracle’s plans for Java once the Sun acquisition goes through, which has looked increasingly likely since the database and applications giant stopped acting tough and started talking to the EU.
Today though I read a post by Clive Birnie that made me think – If In Doubt Act […]