Messaging apps are arguably the most successful smartphone apps, collectively boasting more than 3 billion accounts; WhatsApp, the leader, alone has 700m. But there is more to them than messages. At an event that starts today in San Francisco, Facebook is expected to say that it will turn its app—called Messenger—which has 500m users, into a "platform". That means others will be able to develop software for it (for gaming, hotel bookings, tickets and so on). Facebook is following WeChat, the leading messaging service in China, and KakaoTalk, a South Korean app, which are already platforms of sorts. But it is also moving into territory occupied by Apple and Google and their respective smartphone operating systems, iOS and Android. Tech veterans may recall the "browser wars" of the late 1990s—the last time a successful program, Netscape's Navigator, tried to usurp a dominant operating system, Microsoft's Windows. The messaging wars may be just beginning.
1977年,劳伦斯·埃里森 (Lawrence J. Ellison: 甲骨文 CEO) 同另外两名合伙人在美国加州圣塔克拉拉合资成立了一所名为软件发展的实验室 (SDL: Software Development Laboratories)。1978年,实验室以汇编语言开发出第一版甲骨文系统 (Oracle)。1979年,实验室更名为关连式软件公司 (RSI: Relational Software, Inc.)。1982年,公司更名为甲骨文系统公司 (Oracle Systems Corporation) 并正式推出甲骨文系统。从最初的年入账不及百万美金,到2017年的1900亿美元市值。甲骨文是继微软后,全球收入第二多的软件公司。
本集首播于2016-05-03
Ask the Oracle: What next for Salesforce?
The flood of rumours about a takeover of Salesforce, a cloud-computing pioneer worth $47 billion, has slowed to a trickle since Microsoft indicated this month that it had no plans for a purchase. But the matter is certain to come up today when Marc Benioff, Salesforce's larger-than-life boss, talks to investors and analysts about first-quarter results. This looks like a good moment for Mr Benioff to sell: Salesforce's growth seems to have peaked and it hasn't made a quarterly profit since mid-2011. The likeliest suitor remains Oracle, the world's second-biggest software-seller, despite repeated denials. Salesforce is cut from Oracle cloth: not only is Mr Benioff a former Oracle executive, but his firm is also built on Oracle technology. What's more, as well as having the financial heft for such a deal, Oracle needs to strengthen its cloud business—and has a succession problem. Salesforce could be the answer to both.