March 24th, 2010 Launching TagVerifier.com

Third Eye is pleased to announce the launch of TagVerifier.com, a Software Identification Tag Verification tool. Check out the tool at http://tagverifier.com/

The SWID tags created out of the SWID Tag Creation Tool, previously developed by Third Eye for TagVault.org, are the ones that can be now verified online at http://tagverifier.com

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August 10th, 2009 Third Eye wins TagVault.org’s RFP

Third Eye is pleased and honored to announce that it is the official winner of TagVault.org’s RFP for Tag Creation Tool. Third Eye would be developing tools and utilities that would enable TagVault to deliver its promise to the Software Asset Management industry.

TagVault.org is a non-profit, membership-driven organization that is formed under the structure of IEEE-ISTO. It is created to become the registration authority for ISO/IEC 19770-2 software tags. In addition, it serves as a forum for information sharing among Software Asset Management (SAM) providers, software publishers, and tool providers. Software tools such as cross-vendor, cross-platform API are also available.

As a member of IEEE-ISTO, an organization that standardizes technical implementations of today’s technologies, TagVault.org helps facilitates the necessary activities to drive market acceptance.

To meet its objectives, TagVault.org has partnered with Third Eye to develop software tools and utilities for TagVault and its members.

Follow the details here…

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June 18th, 2009 Third Eye Launches MyContextualAds.com – Serving Contextual Ads from the Amazon Marketplace

Third Eye built the technology behind the services that MyContextualAds.com offers. It is so sophisticated and state-of-the-art that we are in the process of getting a patent for it!

MyContextualAds.com uses semantic, statistical, and linguistic algorithms to analyze content, extracting and ranking keywords to match them to the most relevant products on the Amazon.com Marketplace and delivering contextual ads that are served on any website or blog.

For further details follow this link

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June 10th, 2009 Third Eye Announces it Partnership with Aster Data Systems

Third Eye partners with Aster Data System to develop custom industry specific solutions, perform consulting services & become a nationwide reseller of their high-performance analytic database systems for data warehousing

For further details, click here

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June 9th, 2009 Third Eye Partners with OpSource

Third Eye partners with OpSource to provide professional services to ‘Software as a Service’ and Web Companies to help them perform complete web operations based on OpSource’s infrastructure.

For details, click here

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May 18th, 2009 Amazon + Hadoop…Now that’s a match made in heaven!

Amazon introduces Elastic MapReduce, “a web service that enables businesses, researchers, data analysts and developers to easily and cost-effectively process vast amounts of data.”

In its statement, Amazon said:
Amazon Elastic MapReduce creates data processing job flows that are executed by Hadoop software on the web-scale infrastructure of Amazon EC2. The service automatically launches and configures the number and type of Amazon EC2 instances specified by customers. It then kicks off a Hadoop implementation of the MapReduce programming model, which loads large amounts of user input data from Amazon S3 and then subdivides it for parallel processing using Amazon EC2 instances. As processing completes, data is re-combined and reduced into a final solution, and the results deposited back into Amazon S3. Users can configure, manipulate, and monitor job flows through web service APIs or via the AWS Management Console.

It’s kind of a big deal, says Dana Gardner: “Think of it as having your own tuned supercomputer that you can plug gigantic data sets into and ask questions that will determine the course of your businesses for the next decade. Oh, and you can pay for the pleasure on a credit card.”

Techcrunch says: With Hadoop, Amazon Adds A Web-Scale Data Processing Engine To Its Cloud Computer

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April 27th, 2009 The Open Source Data Warehouse Revolution

By Miriam Tuerk at IT Today

After IBM researchers delivered the first data warehouse in the late 1980s, businesses looked forward to finally being able to store critical data in easy-to-find, centralized locations. Employees at all levels would be able to tap that rich data to make decisions based on concrete, analytical facts instead of gathering scattered information from different sources or using plain intuition.

Like many sweeping technology promises, the vision sounded grand, but sadly didn’t become the reality for many companies throughout the 1990s. The problem, however, was never the lack of capabilities with the technology. Rather, big commercial data warehouses were so expensive that they largely remained the luxury of very big organizations with the budgets to buy the systems and the staff to implement and maintain them. Aside from the steep cost, some of these data warehouses had critics who claimed the systems delivered big IT headaches, with little return on investment.

Data warehousing, however, is changing quickly to meet the demands of companies with large volumes of data that require fast answers to complex, unpredictable questions. What’s providing the answers today - in a more affordable, simpler way - is the two-word IT revolution called open source, which is providing the building blocks required to create a whole new data warehouse.

Follow the rest of the story…

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March 11th, 2009 A Look at the Improved MySpace Music

Excerpt from TechCrunch…

Over the last few weeks MySpace Music has quietly rolled out a number of new features that should make the service significantly more appealing to consumers. While MySpace Music kicked off to an fairly impressive start when it launched last September, seeing a huge amount of traffic and streamed songs, even its President Courtney Holt has conceded that it wasn’t very user-friendly and didn’t bring many new features to the table. The initial launch of MySpace Music was mostly about laying the groundwork to build a sustainable business. Now, the site is shifting focus to deliver what its consumers want.

Read on further on TechCrunch…

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