Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Marc Russell Benioff was born into a Jewish family [citation needed] on September 25, 1964, in the San Francisco Bay Area. [5] He is the grandson of Marvin Lewis, who was a California trial attorney and member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors who championed the creation of the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) system.
Classification records MARC records containing classification data. For example, the Library of Congress Classification has been encoded using the MARC 21 Classification format. Community Information records MARC records describing a service-providing agency, such as a local homeless shelter or tax assistance provider. Holdings records
As an XML schema it is intended to be able to carry selected data from existing MARC 21 records as well as to enable the creation of original resource description records. It includes a subset of MARC fields and uses language-based tags rather than numeric ones, in some cases regrouping elements from the MARC 21 bibliographic format.
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff has a plan to get ahead in the age of artificial intelligence: AI agents. In a recent interview with Fortune magazine, Benioff discussed Salesforce's "hard pivot" to ...
The artificial intelligence revolution is here, and it's about to accelerate in a big way, Salesforce co-founder, chairman, and CEO Marc Benioff told Yahoo Finance Live."This is the most exciting ...
Ives rates Salesforce shares at Outperform with a price target of $425, or potential upside of 21%. According to Yahoo Finance data , 68% of the 50 sell-side analysts that cover Salesforce rate it ...
An ISO 2709 record has four sections: Record label—the first 24 characters of the record. This is the only portion of the record that is fixed in length. The record label includes the record length and the base address of the data contained in the record.
The Salesforce CEO slammed Microsoft's AI assistant in an X post, saying, "It just doesn't work." Last month Benioff compared Copilot to Clippy, Microsoft's discontinued animated paperclip assistant.