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 July 2004
7/30/2004
The credit-rating service and credit-analysis software supplier said revenue was up about 6% but net income was down almost 4%.
7/30/2004
ActiveState and Zend Technologies both have updated their tools for open-source scripting languages.
7/29/2004
The credit-rating service and credit-analysis software supplier said revenue was up about 6% but net income was down almost 4%.
7/27/2004
Gartner cites software company as leader in process-management tools.
7/23/2004
IBM and Microsoft try for larger market shares; high functionality versus easy-to-use
7/21/2004
It's making some of its key middleware available to colleges and universities that want to use it for teaching computer skills.
7/20/2004
It plans to expand the number of Java developers to compete with Visual Studio tools.
7/19/2004
Investors slapped the Linux supplier with six class-action suits after it said it would restate earnings and change accounting methods.
7/16/2004
7/16/2004
IBM buys Alphablox to let it embed tools in applications for real-time analysis
7/14/2004
Senior VP Steven Mills says the company's acquisition of Alphablox is an example of how IBM continues to build out its middleware offerings for business.
7/13/2004
It's changing the basis by which it recognizes software subscription revenue from a monthly to a daily accounting method.
7/2/2004
Sun can nurture Java; McNealy challenges IBM to open its code and end its 'Java envy'
7/1/2004
BEA Systems urges Sun to contribute the Java language as open source code, but businesses might not want that.
7/1/2004
BEA Systems urges Sun to contribute the Java language as open source code, but businesses might not want that.