Profile of Doug Henschen
Executive Editor, Enterprise Apps
Member Since: 11/15/2013
Author
News & Commentary Posts: 1717
Comments: 695
Doug Henschen is Executive Editor of InformationWeek, where he covers the intersection of enterprise applications with information management, business intelligence, big data and analytics. He previously served as editor in chief of Intelligent Enterprise, editor in chief of Transform Magazine, and Executive Editor at DM News. He has covered IT and data-driven marketing for more than 15 years.
Articles by Doug Henschen
posted in February 2011
2/23/2011
Business intelligence and information management suites are synchronized and enhanced in a feature-packed release highlighting real-time analysis.
2/16/2011
Vertica acquisition fills a big gap, but it also raises questions about Hewlett Packard's alliances and broader ambitions.
2/14/2011
Noted author Stephen Baker says this week's man vs. machine TV contest will help Big Blue attract the best and brightest. Early uses of the technology will show up on cell phones, he predicts.
2/10/2011
Magic Quadrant puts Teradata in the top spot with Oracle and IBM close behind. Report sees growing interest in column-store, in-memory and cloud-based technologies.
2/8/2011
Cincinnati Zoo taps analytics to improve attendance, increase guest spending, streamline operations and anticipate the impact of weather and seasonality.
2/7/2011
Software development kit and extension-app vision mature a software-as-service suite into a customizable platform as a service.
2/3/2011
Venerable financial and operations app adds Web, mobile and business intelligence options. Can it compete despite the software-as-a-service buzz?
2/2/2011
Integration update aims to make it easier to expose SAP functionality through SharePoint so developers can quickly deliver user-friendly applications.
2/1/2011
Business intelligence buyers want easy data exploration. That has small, independent vendors waxing and a few BI incumbents mired in a "new normal" malaise.
2/1/2011
Super Bowl ads will tout Salesforce.com's new 'freemium' service. But is microblogging the best way to keep up on corporate matters? And will any one tool be used by all?