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To paraphrase Mr. Twain, the reports of enterprise resource planning’s demise are greatly exaggerated. ERP vendors have ...
SAP's purchase of TomorrowNow in 2005 sounded like a great idea: Undercut Oracle on support and squeeze your biggest rival. And then came Oracle's lawsuit. Written by Larry Dignan, Contributor ...
A federal jury has ordered SAP to pay $1.3 billion to its archenemy, Oracle, for stealing customer-support documents and software in a scheme to steal customers.
Oracle is putting out the word that it's gaining market share at the expense of SAP to distract attention from its declining revenues and profits, but the numbers put the lie to the spin. Oracle ...
SAP and Oracle are at each other's throats. It's a titillating side show that side steps some of the realities - at least for SAP. Written by Dennis Howlett, Contributor Oct. 3, 2011, 10:41 p.m. PT ...
Oracle, which has previously said it will seek $1 billion in damages from SAP, raised the new charges on the day before SAP is scheduled to announce second-quarter earnings. An SAP spokesman ...
SAP has admitted to the software theft and the trial is about how much it should pay in damages. Oracle is seeking at least US$2 billion, partly for what it says SAP would have paid to license the ...
Oracle's Larry Ellison said 100-plus customers were switching from SAP to Oracle's ERP software. Oracle in Q3 signed "contracts totaling hundreds of millions of dollars" from SAP customers.
SAP will finish porting its ERP (enterprise resource planning) application to the Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise (ASE) database later this year, giving customers now running Oracle and other ...
By Dan Levine OAKLAND, California (Reuters) - SAP AG must pay Oracle Corp $1.3 billion for software theft in a jury verdict that could be the largest-ever for copyright infringement.
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