upcoming week's Collaborate 2007 Oracle users' group conference in Las Vegas, Microsoft is rolling out a contest to encourage developers to integrate
Office 2007 with Oracle applications. of the "O 2 OBA Challenge" gets $25,
office 2010 Home And Business upgrade key,000 to implement the resulting mash-up. (Microsoft also is convening at Collaborate 2007 a meeting of members of its newly minted "Microsoft Technology Consortium for Oracle Applications Users" subsequent week, as well, and plans to focus on how SharePoint Server wil "light up" customers Oracle applications.) has built a number of these kinds of Office mash-ups, which Microsoft calls Office Business Applications (OBAs). The best known of the existing OBAs is Duet, the jointly-developed Microsoft-SAP application which integrates Office on the front end with SAP CRM and ERP/supply chain processes on the back-end. Microsoft also is integrating Office with its own back-end ERP and CRM products,
discount office 2007 key, and announced in March its plans for a "Dynamics Client for Microsoft Office and SharePoint Server." been working to hone its definition of OBA for more than a year. Recently,
microsoft office 2007 Professional Plus license, I stumbled onto Microsoft Architecture Strategist Mike Walker's blog. If you want to get a good handle on all things OBA, this is your site. are OBAs?" post is a must-read for anyone trying to figure out why OBAs matter to Microsoft (and will matter,
microsoft office Home And Student 2010 license, going forward,
microsoft office pro plus generator key, to its users). And in his "What types of OBAs are there?" post, Walker explains the difference between Office-client-only and Office-client-plus SharePoint OBAs. to the Oracle OBA challenge. Microsoft has competed with Oracle on the database side and JD Edwards and PeopleSoft on the business application side for a while now. It looks like Microsoft is going to turn up the middleware/SOA heat on Oracle up coming.