Microsoft Corp. on Monday launched new software that will help businesses
Published:
6 June 2000 y., Tuesday
At a developer's conference in Orlando, Fla., Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates unveiled the new product, called BizTalk Server 2000, as well as a $2 billion commitment by the company to train
developers in BizTalk and other products. The product comes as Microsoft awaits a federal judge's ruling on an appropriate remedy for the company's violation of U.S. antitrust laws. The U.S. Justice Department has proposed breaking Microsoft into two companies. BizTalk Server is based on XML, or extensible markup language, which is increasingly being used in business Web sites and networks to seamlessly transfer information between different computers and companies.
A key feature of BizTalk, which will ship in a test version later this summer, is so-called "Orchestration" technology, one of the fruits of Microsoft's $1.3 billion purchase of Visio Corp. last year. Orchestration will help the different computers involved in a business transaction talk to each other, making it easier to pass data from a server computer to a desktop PC to a handheld device.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
FBI alleges pair stole credit info
more »
A security flaw in Netscape's SmartDownload browser plug-in leaves users vulnerable to attack even if the application is disabled.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
Web sites fined for violating children's privacy policy
more »
The Government is to shut down its award-winning open.gov.uk Web portal - best described as the front door to Britain's e-government services - in July.
more »
VeriSign expands domain names to more than 350 languages
more »
Korean Government Backs National Webcasting Industry
more »
RIAA composes Net radio license for start-up
more »
Auctioneer Pulls Listing After a Day
more »
The digital divide, as it relates to both basic telephone service and the Internet, is widening in Latin America, according to Gartner's Dataquest unit.
more »