Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2011

Nokia gives good news finally!

Nokiaoffice.jpgHELSINKI: Nokia Corp has reported better than expected first quarter profits despite confirming that its market share around the world dropped below 30 percent for the first time in over a decade, as the world's top cellphone maker continued to lose ground to its rivals. 

Though the Finnish company said its net profit for the quarter fell €5 million to €344 million ($499 million) a year earlier, the markets were impressed by the news that operating profit only fell 14 percent during the period instead of the anticipated 40 percent decline. 

Nokia shares were up 3 percent at €6.11 ($8.87) in afternoon trading in Helsinki

Elsewhere in its statement, Nokia revealed that its revenues grew by 9 percent to €10.40 billion from €9.52 billion in the same period in 2010, while smartphone sales were up 6 percent at €7 billion. 

Despite the increase in smartphone sales, Nokia confirmed that its overall global market share plunged to 29 percent, from 33 percent a year earlier and 31 percent in the previous quarter. 

CEO Stephen Elop said Nokia has now signed a "definitive" deal with Microsoft Corp to develop software for smartphones "and that product design and engineering work was well under way." 

But he cautioned that the company faced "a more challenging second quarter.'' 

Nokia said the tsunami and earthquake in Japan had disrupted the supply of some components linked to Japanese suppliers and would impact its results in the second quarter. 

Nokia is the world's top cellphone maker but faces stiff competition in top-end smartphones from Apple Inc's iPhone, Android-based handsets and Research in Motion's Blackberry. 

However, Nokia said it sold 24 million smartphones, 13 percent more than in 2010. 

Total handset sales were only slightly up at 108.5 million, Nokia said.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Google apps lacked key security certification: DOJ

SEATTLE: Google Inc's Internet-based software applications for government customers don't have a key security certification, contrary to the company's claims in a lawsuit over a multimillion-dollar contract, the US Department of Justice said in a December legal filing. 

In a filing unsealed April 8, the Justice Department said it "appears" that Google Apps for Government software doesn't have Federal Information Security Management Act certification, "notwithstanding Google's representations to the public at large, its counsel, the GAO ( Government Accountability Office) and this court." A different version of Google Apps received the certification last year, the Justice Department wrote. 

Google sued the US Interior Department in October, arguing that a planned $49.3 million contract to provide e-mail and online-collaboration services lacked sufficient competition and gave favorable treatment to Microsoft Corp, which was set to be awarded the contract. The Justice Department comments were part of a government filing seeking a judgment in favor of the US and dismissal of Google's complaint. 

"We did not mislead the court or our customers," said David Mihalchik, an executive with the Google Enterprise unit, in an e-mailed statement. "Google Apps received a FISMA security authorization from the General Services Administration in July 2010. Google Apps for Government is the same system with enhanced security controls that go beyond FISMA requirements. As planned we're working with GSA to continuously update our documentation with these and other additional enhancements." 

Applications pending 
The case is being heard by US Court of Federal Claims Judge Susan Braden in Washington. Braden issued an order on Jan. 3 preventing the agency from proceeding with the official award of the contracts. 

Google, based in Mountain View, California, is in the process of finishing its application to get FISMA certification for Google Apps for Government. The Microsoft product that the Interior Department chose, BPOS-Federal, is also going through the certification process as part of a contract Microsoft has with the US Department of Agriculture. 

"This case is about the Department of Interior limiting its proposal to one product that isn't even FISMA certified, so this question is unrelated to our request that DOI allow for a true competition when selecting its technology providers," Mihalchik said. 

Temporary authority 
Microsoft has a temporary authority to operate from USDA as part of its contract with that agency, and the final certification is expected soon, said Kevin Kutz, a spokesman for Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft. 

"Google can't be under the misimpression that FISMA certification for Google Apps Premier also covers Google Apps for Government," wrote David Howard, a Microsoft deputy general counsel, in a posting on the company's "Microsoft on the Issues" blog. "If that were the case, then why did Google, according to the attachments in the DOJ brief, decide to file a separate FISMA application for Google Apps for Government?"

Microsoft takes ERP to cloud

SEATTLE: Microsoft Corp is making its strongest push yet into the steadily growing business software market in the hope that it can create another multibillion-dollar business. 

The world's biggest software company, which still gets the majority of its sales from its Windows and Office franchises, is hoping it can wrestle market share from heavyweights SAP AG and Oracle Corp, and upstart online vendor Salesforce.com Inc. 

"The opportunities to make a good business economically are wonderful," said Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer in a telephone interview. "We're pretty pumped up." 

Research firm IDC predicts that companies will spend $118 billion a year worldwide on "enterprise applications" by 2014, referring to the software they use to automate accounting, human resources, sales, supply chains and other operations. 

Ballmer declined to target a percentage figure his company hopes to win, but thinks it can outpace the leaders. 

"If we don't dramatically outgrow Oracle and SAP I'd be disappointed," Ballmer said. 

Earlier in the day, Ballmer unveiled the company's latest plans at Microsoft's business software conference in Atlanta, attended by about 9,000 users. 

He gave a preview of the company's new enterprise resource planning (ERP) software -- the flagship of its business applications efforts -- which will soon be accessible online or "in the cloud" for the first time. 

Growing market 
Worldwide businesses spent about $21 billion on ERP software last year, according to tech research firm Gartner, and that figure is set to grow about 5 percent a year over the next few years. 

Microsoft is currently a distant fifth in the market, behind SAP, Oracle, Sage Group Plc and Infor Global Solutions. 

The other main business segment is customer relationship management (CRM), or programs for organizing a company's contacts with customers and sales activities, which is worth about $10 billion a year and set to grow at around 7 percent a year, according to Gartner. 

Microsoft is fourth in that market, behind SAP, Oracle and Salesforce.com, which pioneered the "cloud" approach, where users access programs over the web rather than use ones installed on their own computers. 

That presented a direct challenge to Microsoft, whose dominance in operating systems is based on installed software, but the company is fighting back and embracing the cloud. 

It moved a version of its CRM product online, and said on Monday that its Microsoft Dynamics ERP application will run on its Azure platform, which Microsoft created as the basis for its cloud-based offerings. 

"The move to the cloud is big for this category and we're driving ahead," said Ballmer. 

Analyst divided 
Microsoft has been in the ERP business for 10 years, after buying accounting software company Great Plains in 2001. It added Danish firm Navision a year later to expand its range and extend its customer base in Europe

Over those 10 years, Microsoft has grown steadily but has not managed to seriously challenge the market leaders. It does not break out revenue from its business software products, but Gartner puts Microsoft's combined ERP and CRM software revenue at about $1.7 billion last year. 

That's a fraction of Microsoft's overall $62 billion revenue last fiscal year, and only a small part of the almost $19 billion in sales from its Business Division, which is dominated by the Office suite of programs. 

"We see this opportunity as very significant," said Kirill Tatarinov, who runs Microsoft Business Solutions, in an interview last week. "It is certainly a growing profit engine inside Microsoft that is really now bringing a very positive impact on the corporation. Over time we expect that impact to grow." 

Microsoft executives say its products work out cheaper than its rivals, factoring in the whole cost of ownership over time, and have a huge advantage by working seamlessly with its Outlook email and SharePoint web applications, which are standard issue in most offices worldwide. 

"Microsoft is exceptionally interesting right now," said Sharon Mertz, an analyst at Gartner specializing in CRM. "They've been pushing online like crazy, and they've been getting traction. I think they are making inroads." 

Microsoft says it has 27,000 customers and 1.7 million users of its Microsoft Dynamics CRM application worldwide. In comparison, Salesforce.com says it has more than 90,000 customers, and more than 3 million subscribers. 

Some doubt that Microsoft can compete with SAP and Oracle, especially in the large company market for ERP and CRM. 

"Frankly, I don't give them much chance. Oracle right now is a juggernaut, especially after they bought Sun Microsystems," said Michael Yoshikami, CEO of investment firm YCMNET Advisors. 

"They can carve out a percentage of the market, but not be a dominant player. I don't see anything they have that's unique enough to make them anything more than number three or four."

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Microsoft brings Office Web apps in India

New Delhi: Software giant Microsoft launched its Office Web Apps in India, which will allow users to access applications like Word, Excel and PowerPoint for free.

Users can access Office Web Apps, the online companions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote for free using their Windows Live ID on the SkyDrive or Hotmail, Microsoft India said in a statement.

This will allow users to create, view, edit, and share Office documents from anywhere with an Internet connection, it added.

"Office Web Apps are a key piece of Microsoft's overall cloud strategy and are designed to empower people to take their familiar productivity experience on the web," Microsoft Business Division Director Sanjay Manchanda said.

There are more than 30 million users of the beta version of Office Web Apps globally, within over six months after it was introduced.

Source: Microsoft brings Office Web apps in India - Technology news

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