Blogs

A new File Analysis and Management product from US firm ZL Technologies promises to reign in corporate file share environments by joining advanced analytics capabilities with its governance architecture.

Dropbox is developing a new way for its users to access every file even without sufficient storage on their local PC or device, dubbed Project Infinite.

iPhone and iPad apps for the Objective Connect document filesharing service are now available from App Store.

Adobe has enhanced enhanced mobile signing with the Adobe Sign app (formerly Adobe eSign Manager DC) for e-signatures now available for iOS and Android. An updated dashboard and improved send for signature workflow have been added along with integration between Adobe Sign and Adobe Experience Manger (AEM) Forms for digital processes.

SharePoint add-ins from harmon.ie have been consolidated into a single, unified offering, updated to that streamline workplace collaboration and make SharePoint easier to use in the enterprise environment.

US storage software developer Infinite IO has launched a a Metadata Accelerator it claims can massively speed up access to data on network attached storage systems

Sony has unveiled the second generation of its Optical Disc Archive System, which adopts a new, high-capacity optical media developed jointly by Sony and Panasonic.  This newest media, rated with a 100-year shelf life, doubles the capacity of a single cartridge to 3.3 TB.

DocsCorp has extended the reach of its contentCrawler data discovery platform to Microsoft SharePoint Online, and the solution is now available from the Azure Marketplace.

Salience for Android is claimed to be the first native text analytics package for a mobile operating system. Developer Lexalytics says it can be used by application developers to offer mobile users sophisticated natural language processing (NLP) and analytics to any app that uses text: email, SMS and chat, reviews, comparison shopping, social media, travel, hospitality and more.

Text recognition developer A2iA is expanding its list of supported languages and character-types, to allow English, French, Arabic, Portuguese, German and Spanish documents to be automatically transcribed without a dictionary, regardless of whether written in machine print or cursive handwriting, and transformed into searchable and editable electronic data.

Pages