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AS OF 5/16/2008 3:57AM EST
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2004 — Recognizing Leadership & Innovation
Industry awards are always fascinating to judge, to contemplate, to examine.
By SD Times News Team
May 15, 2004 —
Some awards are based on fixed numerical rankings, the best-known of which might be the Fortune 500. Others are subjective polls by the members of an organization, such as the 76-year-old Academy Awards, produced by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
The SD Times 100 awards, now in its second year, falls somewhere between the Fortune 500 and the Oscars. The judges-the editors and writers of the newspaper-draw upon their knowledge of industry trends, developer needs, emerging technologies, market positions and recent innovations to determine the current leaders of the software development industry.
This approach, focused on leadership and innovation, makes the SD Times 100 truly reflective of the companies that are making the biggest wave and the biggest difference to developers today, and are most strongly influencing the future direction of platforms, tools, run-times and other emerging aspects of software development.
Because the SD Times 100 doesn't focus on numbers-market share, market capitalization, new products announced, number of patents-we can look at the real thought leaders, as well as those who are driving the industry through sheer strength of investment and market dominance.
A big company can demonstrate that it's still on top of the game and setting a broad industry agenda. A small company gaining traction on a great idea can displace a larger, deeply entrenched player that's seemingly stuck in neutral gear.
When examining awards of this sort, or like the Fortune 500, it's always revealing to see who's new on the list, such as Open Source Development Labs, Novell and the Web Services Interoperability Organization.
It's even more revealing to see who's not on the current list. Found on last year's SD Times 100, but not on this year's, are 27 companies and organizations. In some cases, companies fell off the list because they were acquired, such as TogetherSoft or Rational. In other cases, we felt they failed to either lead or innovate. There is no overall top prize at the SD Times 100. The awards aren't ranked, so there's no equivalent to a Fortune 1 company or an Oscar-winning "Best Picture" that can serve as first among equals.
Yet if we were to recognize a single entity, it would likely be a company that many would prefer instead to ignore: The SCO Group.
It's been a long ride for Caldera, which bought the SCO name and UnixWare assets from the Santa Cruz Operation in 2001. While the company burbled about intellectual property in 2002, last year it exploded onto the scene with its inflammatory lawsuits. The challenges against the legitimacy of open-source software, and demands that enterprise Linux users buy UnixWare licenses, sparked fevered debate, potentially dampening the industry's enthusiasm.
Will SCO succeed? Will it drive enterprise buyers to Sun's Solaris, Microsoft's Windows or SCO's UnixWare? Do its IP lawsuits protect innovation, or stifle it? Many questions, few answers. Let's see if it's on next year's SD Times 100. For now, though, let's see who else is worth mentioning for this year's SD Times 100. Below is a partial list of the winners, the standout entry from each category. For the full list, please download the PDF edition of the 05/15/2004 issue and turn to page 24.
Collaboration—Serena Software, Inc. A big player grew bigger, thanks to its acquisition of TeamShare and enhancements to TestTeam that incorporate its innovative SAFE vision for applying consistent processes across development teams.
Components & Libraries—LogicLibrary, Inc. Close collaboration with Microsoft Corp., plus updates and professional services, has increased the visibility and realizable business value of reusable software assets within larger enterprises.
Database & Data Access—MySQL AB Being responsive to customers pays off, as the updated data-base engine continues to challenge the established enterprise software giants while entrenching itself into application-specific deployments.
Deployment Platforms—JBoss, Inc. Two years ago, the company was an obscure open-source developer eclipsed by Apache; today, it has the hottest J2EE app server in town, zooming from zero to 60 with happy customers and new investment.
Embedded & Mobile—Wind River Systems, Inc. When the top real-time embedded operating system vendor embraces a Linux strategy, everyone takes notice. Wind River's courage, vision and humility might spell the end for proprietary RTOS's.
Influencers—The SCO Group, Inc. The company's legal assaults on IBM and Linux users dominated 2003's tech headlines and shook up the open-source community. No other IT topic inspires such fervent debate, fear, uncertainty and doubt.
Integration & Middleware—Sonic Software Corp. An early leading in Java-based message queuing, the company had technological success with the Enterprise Service Bus and set the pace for the rest of the integration infrastructure industry.
Modeling & Design—Telelogic AB Continues to lead in modeling with compelling offerings from its Doors and Tau product families, requirements management and architecture tools.
Test & Performance—Sanctum, Inc. The early leader in security-focused unit-testing tools for enterprise apps, the company sets the pace for a growing market, while also extending the reach and breadth of its own product family.
Tools & Environment—Eclipse Foundation The second release of the Eclipse IDE, and robust support from a wide range of industry contributers, continued catapulting the framework higher—and deeper—into the Java and Linux universes.
Get the full list here (page 24).


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