Results tagged “API” from ReadWriteEnterprise
11 result(s) displayed (1 - 11 of 11):
I work on a small creative team in Human Resources at Humana, and we're lucky to have access to useful tools and the permission to autonomously scope out and prototype
Continue reading »SOAP is dead. No it's not. SOAP is undead. And the undead still inhabit the enterprise... in a big way. I'm at Gluecon, the kind of event where passionate developers
Continue reading »A natural curiosity surfaces when a company from a different era starts using API's and leveraging the cloud. It shows how fast the world is changing as Web oriented architectures
Continue reading »How do you connect to Twitter and understand its value and performance? That's part of the challenge for any enterprise considering how to adopt social technologies to connect with customers.
Continue reading »In our first post about trends in the enterprise for the coming year, we looked at five forces that will rise in importance in 2010. In part two, we picked
Continue reading »Cloud storage and collaboration company Box.net has opened up its platform to iPhone apps today through a new mobile API. The API lets independent iPhone developers join its OpenBox program,
Continue reading »APIs have become a critical part of the Web, especially if you're a developer. If you want to tap into some of the most useful sites out there, then an
Continue reading »Socialcast has released their official API today, opening up their real-time enterprise collaboration platform to developers for the first time. Socialcast's basic collaborative feature set isn't in dire need of
Continue reading »Gliffy, one of the top Web-based diagramming tools, has released the first API for any service of its kind. This software as a service just got a complete UI makeover,
Continue reading »With some core changes to contacts, Google Apps has dipped a toe in to the enterprise social networking waters. As of today, Apps contacts exhibits shades of Facebook and Twitter
Continue reading »By July first, the web's only free application host with an in-browser editor will be dead. That's right, AppJet's hosting service for apps built with server-side JavaScript will be discontinued
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