BROADVISION jetzt kaufen!
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Eröffnet am: | 19.11.00 14:02 | von: flitzpiepe | Anzahl Beiträge: | 4 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 20.11.00 12:55 | von: Kaiser Sosá | Leser gesamt: | 2.231 |
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Hallo liebe Leute,
der lange Abwärtstrend bei Broadvision ist gebrochen, es kristallisiert sich gerade ein neuer Aufwärtstrend ab!
Kursziel ca. 60 Euro!
flitzpiepe
Also ich kaufe Morgen mal `ne Hand vool davon!! (*;*)
der lange Abwärtstrend bei Broadvision ist gebrochen, es kristallisiert sich gerade ein neuer Aufwärtstrend ab!
Kursziel ca. 60 Euro!
flitzpiepe
Also ich kaufe Morgen mal `ne Hand vool davon!! (*;*)
Jawohl Flitzpiepe !!!!!
Da bin ich ganz Deiner Meinung.
Bin mit BSV seit 22 Euro dabei. Mein einziger Juwel im Depot.
Werde nicht vor 60 Euro verkaufen.
Gruß Krug
Da bin ich ganz Deiner Meinung.
Bin mit BSV seit 22 Euro dabei. Mein einziger Juwel im Depot.
Werde nicht vor 60 Euro verkaufen.
Gruß Krug
aus techweb.com
BroadVision Inc. took a big step in opening up its
e-commerce application platform to industry standards
Wednesday, saying upcoming versions of its products
would support the Java 2 Enterprise Edition platform.
In addition, the company said it had signed a
co-marketing and development deal with BEA Systems
Inc., San Jose, Calif., and would embed BEA's
WebLogic Java server within the BroadVision
One-to-One Enterprise platform. Financial details were
not disclosed.
In making the announcement, BroadVision, Redwood
City, Calif., moved away from the "somewhat
proprietary" technology it used in the past, Shawn
Willett, industry analyst for Current Analysis, Oakland,
Calif., said.
As early as a year ago, BroadVision (stock: BVSN)
applications had their own interface, application server,
and connectors to ERP systems, Willett said.
"Users clearly preferred something standard, such as a
Java application server and Java development tools,"
Willett said, adding that the Java support "opens up
their platform quite a bit."
In the BEA (stock: BEAS) deal, WebLogic would
provide the core J2EE support for version 6 of
One-to-One Enterprise, scheduled to ship by the end of
the first quarter of 2001. The upgrade will run on Solaris
and HP-UX operating systems.
The company would begin to roll out J2EE support
within its e-commerce software, which leverage
One-to-One Enterprise, in the second quarter, starting
with its retail applications.
Pricing was not released, but the average sales price for
BroadVision software is $430,000, officials said.
BroadVision has been successful in the sell-side
commerce market, and recently released procurement
applications and a market-maker application, moving
the company closer to competing with Ariba Inc.,
Mountain View, Calif.
"These are first version products, so I wouldn't say they
are a serious competitor to Ariba (stock: ARBA) right
now," Willett said. "But long term, I think [chief
executive] Pehong Chen really wants to make it a much
bigger company."
Chen appears to be using the playbook by database
giant Oracle Corp. (stock: ORCL), which is "establish
dominance in one segment and then branch out to
others," Willett said.
BroadVision's direct competitors include ATG Group
Inc.; Vignette Corp. (stock: VIGN); IBM Corp. (stock:
IBM); and the Sun-Netscape Alliance.
Grüße
der Kaiser
BroadVision Inc. took a big step in opening up its
e-commerce application platform to industry standards
Wednesday, saying upcoming versions of its products
would support the Java 2 Enterprise Edition platform.
In addition, the company said it had signed a
co-marketing and development deal with BEA Systems
Inc., San Jose, Calif., and would embed BEA's
WebLogic Java server within the BroadVision
One-to-One Enterprise platform. Financial details were
not disclosed.
In making the announcement, BroadVision, Redwood
City, Calif., moved away from the "somewhat
proprietary" technology it used in the past, Shawn
Willett, industry analyst for Current Analysis, Oakland,
Calif., said.
As early as a year ago, BroadVision (stock: BVSN)
applications had their own interface, application server,
and connectors to ERP systems, Willett said.
"Users clearly preferred something standard, such as a
Java application server and Java development tools,"
Willett said, adding that the Java support "opens up
their platform quite a bit."
In the BEA (stock: BEAS) deal, WebLogic would
provide the core J2EE support for version 6 of
One-to-One Enterprise, scheduled to ship by the end of
the first quarter of 2001. The upgrade will run on Solaris
and HP-UX operating systems.
The company would begin to roll out J2EE support
within its e-commerce software, which leverage
One-to-One Enterprise, in the second quarter, starting
with its retail applications.
Pricing was not released, but the average sales price for
BroadVision software is $430,000, officials said.
BroadVision has been successful in the sell-side
commerce market, and recently released procurement
applications and a market-maker application, moving
the company closer to competing with Ariba Inc.,
Mountain View, Calif.
"These are first version products, so I wouldn't say they
are a serious competitor to Ariba (stock: ARBA) right
now," Willett said. "But long term, I think [chief
executive] Pehong Chen really wants to make it a much
bigger company."
Chen appears to be using the playbook by database
giant Oracle Corp. (stock: ORCL), which is "establish
dominance in one segment and then branch out to
others," Willett said.
BroadVision's direct competitors include ATG Group
Inc.; Vignette Corp. (stock: VIGN); IBM Corp. (stock:
IBM); and the Sun-Netscape Alliance.
Grüße
der Kaiser