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 September 2010
9/30/2010
Virtualized data integration makes the connection between cloud services and on-premise ERP systems.
9/29/2010
Talent management system upgrade supports flexible self-service role and task delegation.
9/28/2010
More than 30,000 employees will migrate to services-based e-mail and collaboration.
9/16/2010
Cloud-based applications vendor will add Chatter-style collaboration capabilities.
9/15/2010
This image gallery offers best-practice examples, advice, free resources and insight from experts on the best of data and information visualization.
9/15/2010
Vendor plans growing portfolio of industry-focused, stand-alone apps built on BusinessObjects components.
9/14/2010
Will the hot CRM vendor be a cloud computing shooting star? Microsoft says it's now spending $9.5 billion per year to provide the infrastructure that will be required for the cloud computing era while Salesforce.com is investing only $120 million per year.
9/14/2010
Will the hot CRM vendor be a cloud computing shooting star? Rival exec says R&D investments won't measure up.
9/9/2010
Acquired technologies are paired to speed big-data capture and transformation.
9/8/2010
Collaboration app for iPad, iPhone, RIM and Android will let CRM users follow sales opportunities, customers, service issues and colleagues.
9/7/2010
Popular management suite integrated with budding alternative for big-data transaction processing.
9/3/2010
Some say they are abstract if not downright misleading. But TPC benchmarks remain the only available standardized test of total-system performance and cost. Use them with caution.