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What's news: Six of the best from ZDNet UK

Michael Parsons ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 02 Jul 2004 10:35 BST

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4. Broadband Britain
Lots of stakeholders have an interest in cheap high speed networks, yet although Britain is doing well in comparison to many other countries, there is still a long way to go. In the UK, BT's stranglehold over the last mile is slowing things down and a lot of people want to know when and if things are going to improve. People want more and cheaper connectivity, and there's a confusing tangle of politicians, regulators, and business interests that dictate the way public networks are built. BT has ambitious plans for the future, and wants to build a network for the 21st Century, but some people in remote areas are still finding it a struggle to get basic connectivity.

5. Streaming Software
On-demand software is back in business, with several high profile IPOs set for this year. Salesforce.com has already gone out, and RightNow Technologies has filed its S1 paperwork in preparation to float. The conventional providers of CRM and ERP software are all Web-enabling their technologies, trying to bring the convenience and simplicity of a browser interface to the complex world of business applications in a bid to fight off this strategic threat from vendors like NetSuite. Microsoft has high hopes here with its Great Plains and Navision mid-range applications, as well as an extremely ambitious plan to migrate its entire suite of products to a single code base nick-named project Green. At the same, the revelation that the company had seriously considered merging with SAP during the ongoing Oracle and PeopleSoft merger trial has raised fascinating questions about Microsoft's ability to compete at the high-end of this market on its own.

6. Google Grows
John Battelle's influential search blog notes that at the Wall Street Journal Executive conference in June Microsoft's Bill Gates joked about the buzz that Google has been generating, and it's not hard to see why. Microsoft has been forced to tweak its own search offering and give MSN search a plain and simple opening page - just like Google. The launch of Google's free email service Gmail continues to cause a stir and seems extremely popular with our readers -- ZDNet UK's TalkBack has been inundated with people trying to blag Gmail accounts. And that's despite the privacy concerns raised by some observers unhappy with the way Gmail targets advertising against its users' messages. The company is planning an IPO which it hopes will rewrite the rules for technology investing by allowing smaller investors to get a piece of the action. Its S1 papers filed in preparation for the IPO give a tantalising glimpse into the scale of the technology platform it has built to manage the world's searches. If you combine the potential for a platform which has the scale and performance of what Google is already doing with search, and with the trend towards hosted applications, it becomes clear that Google has the potential to be a disruptive force in computing beyond what it has already achieved in search.

So that's six of the best from ZDNet UK. Do these themes resonate with you, and if not, which others do? Let me know at michael.parsons@zdnet.co.uk.

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