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BeyeNETWORK UK Content (Free subscription) | 11/20/2009
According to a November 2009 report from independent analyst firm Forrester Research, Oracle is a leader in business performance solutions (BPS).
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PR News Wire (Free subscription) | yesterday
... planning and financial reporting capabilities," in a 10-vendor assessment of a market that Forrester Research, Inc. predicts will grow by a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 12.7% through 2012, despite the current recession.Clarity was a strong performer among a score of BPS criteria for its Clarity 6 and Clarity FSR(R) solutions and mention was made of Clarity's "...focus on...
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SeekingAlpha CE Stocks (Free subscription) | 11/22/2009
... market for e-book devices, dwarfing sales to casual readers, predicts Sarah Epps, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Corning Inc. ( GLW ), which is developing glass screens for e-readers, expects textbooks to fuel about 80 percent of demand for those components by 2019. Complete Story »
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Sacramento Bee (Free subscription) | 11/22/2009
... virtual shopping carts, nearly double the amount spent online during the 2004 season, according to Forrester Research Inc. "People view the Internet as the place to get really good deals," Silverman said. "During a recession, it's even more so." Big-ticket items, such as home furnishings, or higher-end purchases, such as fine jewelry, might not get the same online...
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Star Tribune (Free subscription) | 11/22/2009
... market for e-book devices, dwarfing sales to casual readers, predicts Sarah Epps, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Mass. Corning Inc., developing glass screens for e-readers, expects textbooks to fuel about 80 percent of demand for those components by 2019."Print will expire faster in the textbook world than in the trade book world," Epps said. "The technical...
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Zandar Versus The Stupid (Free subscription) | 11/21/2009
... textbooks at schools threatens to eclipse the current market for the products. Sony and Amazon.com Inc. ’s Kindle are both expanding into the academic world. Students at Blyth Academy in Toronto do all their reading on Sony devices, and five U.S. universities are testing the Kindle. The days of students lugging around heavy textbooks may be numbered, said Sony executive Steve Haber...
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Open IT Strategies (Free subscription) | 11/21/2009
... market for e-book devices, dwarfing sales to casual readers, predicts Sarah Epps, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Corning Inc., which is developing glass screens for e-readers, expects textbooks to fuel about 80 percent of demand for those components by 2019. “Print will expire faster in the textbook world than in the trade book world,”...
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Fast Company (Free subscription) | 11/21/2009
... notes in their reading assignments, or at least on post-its. Yet Sarah Epps, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc., predicts in five years textbooks will be the biggest market for e-book devices. "The technical barriers will disappear and five years is enough for the content to catch up with demand. The potential is there," she told Bloomberg today. Granted the devices will...
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Law Blog - WSJ.com (Free subscription) | 11/21/2009
By Inc. on Friday said customers who order its Nook electronic-book reader now won't get it until the week of Jan. 4."Preorders have exceeded our expectations," said Barnes & Noble spokeswoman Mary Ellen Keating.The company said in a statement that its $259 e-book reader "continues to be the fastest-selling product at Barnes & Noble.…While we increased production based on the high consumer interest,...
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Law Blog - WSJ.com (Free subscription) | 11/17/2009
According to a recent study of Europeans who book travel online by Forrester Research Inc., a survey firm in Cambridge, Mass., many shoppers think travel organizations push technology that suits the seller and isn't "designed with the traveler in mind." The report said this explains why growth in online leisure-travel booking in Europe has slowed. Currently, 62% of Europeans book holidays...
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Law Blog - WSJ.com (Free subscription) | 11/17/2009
According to a recent study of Europeans who book travel online by Forrester Research Inc., a survey firm in Cambridge, Mass., many shoppers think travel organizations push technology that suits the seller and isn't "designed with the traveler in mind." The report said this explains why growth in online leisure-travel booking in Europe has slowed. Currently, 62% of Europeans book holidays...