Strategic advice to leverage new technologies

Technology is at the heart of nearly every enterprise, enabling new business models and strategies, and serving as the catalyst to industry convergence. Leveraging the right technology can improve business outcomes, providing intelligence and insights that help you make more informed and accurate decisions. From finding patterns in data through data science, to curating relevant insights with data analytics, to the predictive abilities and innumerable applications of AI, to solving challenging business problems with ML, NLP, and knowledge graphs, technology has brought decision-making to a more intelligent level. Keep pace with the technology trends, opportunities, applications, and real-world use cases that will move your organization closer to its transformation and business goals.

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Executive Report

CORBA in Context

Misconceptions about the Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) abound. Perhaps the most pernicious is that this vendor-neutral middleware standard, although technically viable, is irrelevant to real-world computing.

Executive Summary

CORBA in Context

By any reasonable measure, the Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) is a success. Yet it continues to be underestimated, belittled, or completely ignored. Some critics deride the idea of distributed object computing.

One can hardly read a computer magazine these days without encountering at least one article and a half-dozen advertisements touting the use of the Extensible Markup Language (XML).

The term enterprise information portal (EIP) was first used in a Merrill Lynch report dated 16 November 1998. In this report, Merrill Lynch indicated that EIP systems provide companies with great competitive advantage.

The accompanying Executive Report reviews the concepts, product categories, features, and benefits of enterprise portals -- also called corporate portals or enterprise information portals (we use the term enterprise portal in this report). These three equivalent terms are defined as:

This is the second part of our analysis of Cutter Consortium survey data measuring corporate customer relationship management (CRM) initiatives. The findings in this analysis (as well as the preceding) are based on answers provided by 159 survey participants.

One of the most interesting facets of business intelligence these days is data mining, which allows analysts and business professionals to dig deep into their organization's data to find patterns and infer rules. These patterns and rules can then be used to guide business users in making decisions and forecasting the effect of those decisions.

For an industrial company that uses the Web, I don't think there is any end to the opportunities for savings, efficiency, and innovation.... When big companies get on the Web, they see huge benefits because of their relationships, their brands, and their assets.... Large businesses can create shareholder value that overwhelms the value that the dot-coms can create....