IT Vendor Partnerships | Clean fuel cell Energy のブログ

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IT Vendor Partnerships

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We recently reviewed AViiQ's line of ribbon-style USB adapter cables, but found that what made them most unique—their flat cable design—also made them difficult to use. So we couldn't recommend the cables, but maybe the convenience of this new triple-headed all-in-one design might make this cable worth carrying.

It features the exact same flat ribbon design of AViiQ's previous cables, but incorporates a rotating head on the end opposite the USB connector—giving you Apple dock connector, miniUSB, and microUSB options all in a single cable. With an introductory price of $24, with battery like Asus ADP-65DB Ac Adapter , Asus A6 Ac Adapter , Asus A7 Ac Adapter , Asus A8 Ac Adapter , Asus F9 Ac Adapter , Asus U5 Ac Adapter , Asus A6JA Ac Adapter , Asus A7J Ac Adapter , Asus A8Js Ac Adapter , Asus Z91 Ac Adapter , Asus W3V Ac Adapter , Asus Z61a Ac Adapter it's actually cheaper than buying all three of these cables in a set. But just remember that it will only let you charge a single device at a time—one of which may be obsolete soon—so choose wisely.

In fact, behind the often vague expressions of devotion in partnership announcements between technology vendors, most such deals are spelled out in great detail, said Enterprise Strategy Group analyst Evan Quinn.

"If you were to go and dig into the vast majority of these types of contracts, you would find a fair amount of legalese," including terms governing how long the partnership will last and procedures for renewing it, Quinn said. This is especially true of software deals, which are particularly ripe for finger-pointing when something goes wrong for a mutual customer, he said.

For existing users of Oracle software on Itanium, which HP estimates make up 84 percent of enterprises using the platform, Kleinberg's decision may be a hopeful sign in a generally worrisome situation, according to Quinn. Pure business sense demands that Oracle make an honest effort even for strictly court-ordered software versions, he said.

"I do not believe Larry Ellison is going to go back to his database technology team and (say) 'Throw your worst five engineers on the port to Itanium," Quinn said.

At the same time, "Oracle has been pretty blatant about their distaste for Itanium," he added. And Quinn believes the industry as a whole is moving away from processors primarily associated with one system maker, such as Itanium, and toward standard x86 platforms. "Some of these relatively proprietary chipsets and server combinations, they're kind of out of vogue," he said.