Profile of Charles Babcock
Editor at Large, Cloud
Member Since: 11/15/2013
Author
News & Commentary Posts: 3430
Comments: 1573
Charles Babcock is an editor-at-large for InformationWeek and author of Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution, a McGraw-Hill book. He is the former editor-in-chief of Digital News, former software editor of Computerworld and former technology editor of Interactive Week. He is a graduate of Syracuse University where he obtained a bachelor's degree in journalism. He joined the publication in 2003.
Articles by Charles Babcock
posted in November 2005
11/30/2005
Open-source code includes Identity Management Server and Directory Server
11/23/2005
Health-care payers showed the value of electronic records during the recovery
11/22/2005
Hewlett-Packard launched a suite of services to help companies move legacy applications to a service-oriented architecture.
11/21/2005
11/21/2005
When Oracle went into the applications business, did it foresee how the move could affect its database business? Reading between the lines of Microsoft's recent SQL Server 2005 launch, maybe it underestimated the impact.
11/17/2005
Sun says there are now 3.3 million registered users of its open-source Solaris 10
11/15/2005
The Viper version of its DB2 database will include improved capabilities for handling unstructured data such as E-mail, images, and XML documents.
11/14/2005
Buyout indicates growing need for software infrastructure management tools
11/11/2005
Seligman also serves on the boards at Sun Microsystems, Akamai Technologies, and Dun & Bradstreet
11/9/2005
New Microsoft database is at the core of construction company's content management system
11/8/2005
He recommits company to focus on software-delivery optimization and application-life-cycle management.
11/7/2005
11/4/2005
Microsoft's other releases include vital business tools.
11/3/2005
Embarcadero offers database-security tools following its Ambeo buyout.
11/2/2005
Centeris management tools simplify administration of mixed Windows-Linux environments