September 2005 Archives
DreamFactory Announces DreamTeam for Multiforce
September 06, 2005   By: Chuck Russell

DreamFactory announced today support for the Salesforce.com multiforce platform. DreamTeam for multiforce is a Rich Internet Application that adds TeamWork Automation capabilities to salesforce.com. DreamTeam provides integrated applications for Project Management, Collaborative Calendaring, Document Management, and Team Communications including Activity Alerts and Threaded Discussions.

Built from the "ground-up" on the multiforce platform, DreamTeam gives Salesforce.com users the benefit of a single data store and far greater visibility into all of the activities that impact job performance. By tightly integrating Team Collaboration with Project and Document Management, DreamTeam fosters the cross fertilization of ideas within your organization. DreamTeam's highly engaging UI's "cast the net" of these established business practices to a far broader range of users. The advantages of this approach include:

  • Better predictability and visibility into key project activities
  • Better collaboration on the document lifecycle and associated group tasks
  • Better communication on ideas, issues, and problems

The end result of improved collaboration is better and faster output, whether you're managing a competitive sales campaign, a new product release, an expansive marketing campaign, a professional services engagement, or any project critical to your company's success.

Visit DreamTeam Web Site

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Microsoft's Balmer Vows to 'Kill' Google
September 06, 2005   By: Chuck Russell

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer vowed to "kill" Google in an expletitive-laced, chair-throwing tirade when a senior engineer told him he was leaving the company to go work for Google, the engineer claimed in court documents made public on Friday.

The allegation, filed in Washington state court, is the latest salvo in an increasingly nasty court fight triggered when Microsoft executive Kai-Fu Lee jumped to Google in July in what Microsoft claims is a violation of a one-year, non-compete agreement.

In a sworn statement made public Friday, Mark Lucovsky, another Microsoft senior engineer who left for Google in November 2004, recounted Ballmer's angry reaction when Lucovsky told Ballmer he was going to work for the search engine company.

It seem that Microsoft is getting a taste of its own medecine. In other posts on AlwaysOn other members have posited that Google is preparing to eat Microsoft's lunch. What do you think?

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