BlueDragon, BEA WebLogic Edition 6.2.1: Deploying CFML On J2EE Application Servers
White Papers While most Web applications on J2EE servers are built with Servlets, JSPs, EJBs, and other components of the J2EE specification, BlueDragon, BEA WebLogic Edition 6.2.1 makes it possible to deploy CFML applications on J2EE servers as native J2EE...
[July 5, 2006, 0:00]
BEA Bundles Web Application Tools
News BEA competes with Oracle, IBM and others in the market for Java application servers, while Microsoft continues to push its .Net framework for Web services. The bundle combines WebLogic Server with Workshop, a set of Java developer tools; JRockit, a...
[August 23, 2004, 8:50]
BEA Partners HP To Fight IBM App Server
News HP said on Wednesday it will install BEA's WebLogic Java application server software on all of its hardware servers. By becoming the default Java application server on HP hardware, BEA greatly expands its distribution on servers ranging from low...
[May 21, 2003, 15:59]
WebLogic Software Gets A Revamp
News BEA and IBM are battling for the top spot in the market for Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) application servers, which act as container for running custom-built Java applications. A recent research note from Gartner noted that Java application...
[December 13, 2002, 14:39]
Verbal Fisticuffs Break Out At JavaOne
News BEA, he continued, "generates Enterprise Java Beans (EJB) from the application definition, and you may not want to use EJBs. Even before the Java love fest in San Francisco, Oracle and BEA Systems were working the streets to get a head start on...
[June 12, 2003, 13:32]
BEA And Sun Do OS, Server Software Deal
News Once the BEA deal is effective in January, Solaris customers can evaluate and choose between Sun's and BEA's Java application servers. Both Sun and BEA are seeking to gain market share in the hotly contested market for J2EE application servers...
[December 16, 2002, 16:06]
IBM, BEA Brew Up Java Strategy
News IBM and BEA garnered about two-thirds of the revenue for Java application servers in 2002, according to market researcher Gartner Dataquest. IBM and BEA Systems, usually staunch rivals, are collaborating on ways to smooth out technical differences...
[November 25, 2003, 15:30]
Open Source Threatens Java Servers
News Both BEA and IBM have "express versions" of their respective Java application servers aimed at smaller departments within large organisations or medium-sized businesses. Applications written for commercial Java application servers such as BEA's...
[February 14, 2003, 14:04]
Start-up Brews Hardware Boost For Java
News Azul is working to have its products certified with application servers from IBM and BEA Systems, which lead the market. The company has developed a custom processor called Vega that provides a hardware foundation for Java programs that's faster...
[September 28, 2004, 9:25]
BEA Launches Custom Tools, Cuts Price
News Version 8.1 of WebLogic Platform is a key release in BEA's strategy for gaining market share in the highly competitive market for Java application servers, according to the company. In February, BEA unveiled WebLogic Express, which is targeted at...
[March 31, 2003, 16:36]
IBM: JBoss More Of Threat To BEA
News While we both offer J2EE application servers, BEA has always focused on the high-end enterprise market, which has very specific requirements. Robert Sutor, IBM's director of WebSphere Foundation Software, told ZDNet UK on Friday at a press briefing...
[October 5, 2004, 14:35]
IBM Takes Java Server Crown From BEA
News IBM and BEA collectively control 66 percent of the market for application servers that adhere to the Java 2 Enterprise Edition specification, according to Gartner Dataquest numbers. IBM has taken the No.market position away from rival BEA Systems...
[May 7, 2003, 10:59]
Another Exec Departs BEA
News Even as BEA deals with the internal upheaval, the company faces a surge in competition from Oracle, which is aggressively expanding its application server suite business. According to market research, IBM and BEA were the market leaders for...
[August 24, 2004, 16:40]
HP Will Give Away E-business Software
News And it puts pressure on BEA because BEA is known for charging a lot for its application server. While BEA has begun to offer a slew of add-ons to its application server products, such as software that allows companies to build portal sites, the...
[November 5, 2001, 11:16]
BEA Touts 'Visual Basic For Java'
News While BEA is the market leader for application servers, it lacked a compelling tools story as a differentiator. Analysts believe the software code generated by BEA's tool should be able to run on other application servers, with some tinkering.
[February 25, 2002, 15:27]
HP Offers Free Web Server
News Internet Server moves beyond the typical Web server - whether open source Apache or Microsoft Internet Information Server, which primarily serve up HTML pages - but stops short of trying to be a commercial application server - such as Sun...
[June 11, 2001, 15:29]
Sun Mimics Microsoft In Solaris Release
News As reported, Sun's move puts more pressure on Sun business partners such as BEA Systems that already sell application servers. Sun's strategy is to provide "integratable" software products, meaning that a customer still can use BEA's app server...
[May 22, 2002, 9:06]
Azul Brings Java Acceleration To The UK
News The handoff requires minor configuration work on the application server from the likes of BEA or JBoss. So far the idea has started to gather some backing: in June, the company announced marketing and certification deals with BEA and JBoss.
[October 18, 2005, 12:20]
HP Takes Open-source Route Into Software Market
News Since dropping Bluestone, HP has forged a close alliance with BEA and has trained its consulting corps on BEA's WebLogic software running on HP's different hardware servers. HP spent $470m in 2000 to acquire Bluestone Software, a small maker of...
[November 12, 2004, 8:05]
Siebel Expands Partnership With HP, BEA
News Under the new arrangement, BEA Systems has agreed to support a new set of application integration protocols, called the Universal Application Network, which Siebel is developing to make its software suite more interoperable with other applications.
[October 8, 2002, 9:50]

