Adobe’s Acrobat in ‘the cloud’

The News Review:

- Adobe’s Acrobat in ‘the cloud’
- New Wares Bridge Java and .NET
- How To Increase IT’s Value
- A networkable digital storage solution

Adobe’s Acrobat in ‘the cloud’
Globe and Mail – Jun 2, 2008
) Acrobat 9 Pro ($449) and Acrobat 9 Standard ($299). The extended version includes a feature called Presenter which will be able top turn Microsoft PowerPoint presentations into multimedia files that can also be published as PDF files. Acrobat 9 Pro will be available for Mac SX users.

New Wares Bridge Java and .NET
ADT Magazine – Jun 2, 2008
ColdFusion 8 will let developers “leverage the functionality of existing. NET programs access Microsoft products such as Word Excel and PowerPoint and easily integrate ColdFusion apps within the enterprise either on the same Windows server or on a remote machine” Adobe said in a statement. Meanwhile San Francisco-based Thought a provider of dynamic object-to-relational mapping (RM) solutions used Javane to release CocoBase 5. When it was introduced in 1997 CocoBase was the first 100-percent Java RM tool. The new CocoBase 5.

How To Increase IT’s Value
Forbes – Jun 2, 2008
IBM’s surround-and-conquer scheme made perfect sense in a PowerPoint presentation but things didn’t go according to plan. The human brain simply wasn’t wired that way. Thought patterns haven’t changed but it’s now impossible to get performance gains out of a single-core chip without submersing it in liquid nitrogen. That means companies such as Intel (nasdaq:.

A networkable digital storage solution
Toronto Star – Jun 2, 2008
5 inches) that connects to your home network and commands your bloated digital library. It proposes to solve your storage space issue with a couple of 500 GB hard drives (which are expandable just in case you decide to go a bit crazy with those PowerPoint slides or vacation photos) that act as headquarters for your files. The server looks like a small PC without the monitor. Connect it to your home network with an Ethernet cable and tuck it away under a desk somewhere. Consider it a hidden closet for your files. You don’t need to see it or even touch it once it is set up and working… Consider it a hidden closet for your files. You don’t need to see it or even touch it once it is set up and working. Control of the system is done from a computer on your network installed with Microsoft Home Server software an intuitive program that lets you access files from across your system edit them play them and back them all up. Set up is basically a three-step process that unfolds in a matter of 15 minutes. No small bit of engineering brilliance here. HP couldn’t have made a traditionally complex process any simpler. nce the server is connected to the network with an Ethernet cable and the software is installed you are up and running.

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