• fiber optics close-up
    Commentary: Opennet problems threaten to spoil Singapore’s fibre broadband experience
  • 700-nokia-lumia-900-cyan-front-and-back-crop
    Nokia Lumia 900 comes to Singapore on May 26, costs S$849
  • ATH-ANC9 crop
    Goondu review: Audio Technica ATH-ANC9 QuietPoint
  • Dell XPS 13-crop
    SME Toolbox: Basic IT gear for a new business
  • Samsung Galaxy S III crop
    Hands on: Samsung Galaxy S III stars as new flagship phone
Latest Stories
Q&A: Mock Pak Lum, StarHub CTO
Here come the Thunderbolt motherboards from Asus and others
Nvidia takes GPU technologies to the cloud
PayPal promises mobile commerce optimisation in under an hour
 
 
 

SAP Business All-in-One now certified for Amazon Web Services

By:
13 May
2012
2 Comments
 

SAP’s Business All-in-One enterprise software is now certified for deployment on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud. The software, which lets companies manage business operations across industries, mostly resides within the confines of an organisation’s IT infrastructure.

In an announcement Friday, SAP and AWS said the certification, which applies to Windows and Linux AWS instances, will allow companies to quickly implement SAP’s business software on Amazon’s platform without spending on IT infrastructure.

According to VMS, a German consulting firm, running SAP applications on AWS provides infrastructure cost savings of up to 69 per cent compared to the housing the same software on-premise.

 
Tagged in: cloud, Enterprise, Software, Amazon Web Services, ERP, SAP,  
 

SAP will not contest liability of TomorrowNow in Oracle lawsuit

By:
8 Aug
2010
No Comments
 

In a turn of affairs, SAP announced this week that it would not contest the liability of TomorrowNow for downloading proprietary, copyrighted software products and other confidential materials used by Oracle’s support organization.

In 2007, Oracle filed a lawsuit against TomorrowNow, a now defunct SAP subsidiary that offered maintenance and support services for Oracle software at a much lower cost than that provided by Oracle. SAP had said then that it will aggressively defend the claims made in the lawsuit.

On Thursday, SAP said that it will accept financial responsibility for any judgment awarded against TomorrowNow, despite the fact that SAP was not involved in TomorrowNow’s service operations and did not engage in any of the copying or downloading alleged in Oracle’s complaint.

 
Tagged in: Enterprise, Software, Oracle, SAP, TomorrowNow,