Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
OpenText Corporation (styled as opentext) is a Canadian Information company that develops and sells enterprise information management (EIM) software. [2]OpenText, headquartered in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, [3] is Canada's fourth-largest software company as of 2022, [4] and recognized as one of Canada's top 100 employers 2016 by Mediacorp Canada Inc. [5]
GXS (OpenText GXS) is a subsidiary of OpenText Corporation headquartered in Gaithersburg, Maryland, United States. [2] Its GXS Trading Grid managed more than twelve billion transactions [ clarification needed ] in 2011.
Guidance Software, Inc. was a publicly traded company founded in 1997 by Shawn McCreight. Headquartered in Pasadena, California, the company developed and provided software solutions for digital investigations primarily in the United States, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Asia/Pacific Rim. [1]
Autonomy Corporation headquarters at Cambridge Business Park.. HP Autonomy, previously Autonomy Corporation PLC, was an enterprise software company which was merged with Micro Focus in 2017 and OpenText in 2023 (OpenText had acquired the content management assets of Autonomy in 2016).
Together is a product from OpenText, formerly from Micro Focus (acquired by OpenText in 2023), formerly from Borland (acquired by Micro Focus in 2009), formerly from TogetherSoft (acquired by Borland in 2003), that currently integrates a Java IDE, which originally had its roots in JBuilder, [citation needed] with an UML modeling tool.
Hummingbird Ltd. (previously NASDAQ: HUMC, TSX: HUM) is a subsidiary of OpenText and is a provider of enterprise software products including Exceed. Initially founded as a consulting business in 1984, Hummingbird moved into the connectivity market.
OpenText acquired Micro Focus in 2023, and was renamed OpenText Data Protector. [11] With DP Version 24.1 additional security features like Multi-Factor Authentication and Anomaly Detection have been added. Today's version of Data Protector provides full backwards compatibility with its predecessors.
Before 2010, the ticker (trading) symbols for US options typically looked like this: IBMAF. This consisted of a root symbol ('IBM') + month code ('A') + strike price code ('F'). The root symbol is the symbol of the stock on the stock exchange. After this comes the month code, A-L mean January–December calls, M-X mean January–December puts ...