Enterprise IT Management Software Market 2024 Set for Major Growth Surge Over the Next Decade 12-25-2024 07:42 PM CET | Business, Economy, Finances, Banking & Insurance Press release from: Prudent Markets Enterprise IT Management Software Market The Enterprise IT Management Software Market 2024-2023 report provides a comprehensive analysis of Types (Cloud Based, On Premises), Application (Large Enterprises, SMEs), Analysis of Industry Trends, Growth, and Opportunities, R&D landscape, Data security and privacy concerns Risk Analysis, Pipeline Products, Assumptions, Research Timelines, Secondary Research and Primary Research, Key Insights from Industry Experts, Regional Outlook and Forecast, 2024-2032. Major Players of Enterprise IT Management Software Market are: VMware, Freshworks, AWS, Microsoft, Goverlan, SUMMIT Software, Turbonomic, Genuity, ServiceNow, Ivanti, Kaseya, Quest Software, ManageEngine, Riverbed Technology, Oracle, Nicus Software, IBM, BackBox, Red Hat, squaredup, BMC Software, Hashicorp, Apptio, Cireson, Dell, Eracent, CloudCheckr, Micro Focus, Bravura Software, Symphony SUMMIT Get PDF Sample Report Now! @ https://www.prudentmarkets.com/sample-request/9169178/ Enterprise IT management software tools serve as an infrastructure control center for IT departments in mid- to large-sized businesses. These platforms allow the information technology team to oversee company-wide endpoints and communicate with the network for a variety of tasks. Enterprise IT management software give users remote desktop access to employee and administrator platforms for patch and software updates, security settings, and disaster recovery, in addition to system setup and configuration. A number of these programs help bolster IT operations with asset tracking and operational intelligence reporting for data insights such as power consumption and system performance. These programs may also offer multi-factor authentication for identity management and automation of routine tasks. Depending on the platform, certain solutions may be compatible with a single operating system or offer mixed-platform compatibility. This report provides a deep insight into the global Enterprise IT Management Software market covering all its essential aspects. This ranges from a macro overview of the market to micro details of the market size, competitive landscape, development trend, niche market, key market drivers and challenges, SWOT analysis, value chain analysis, etc. The analysis helps the reader to shape the competition within the industries and strategies for the competitive environment to enhance the potential profit. Furthermore, it provides a simple framework for evaluating and accessing the position of the business organization. The report structure also focuses on the competitive landscape of the Global Enterprise IT Management Software Market, this report introduces in detail the market share, market performance, product situation, operation situation, etc. of the main players, which helps the readers in the industry to identify the main competitors and deeply understand the competition pattern of the market. Segmentation of Enterprise IT Management Software Market- By Type Cloud Based, On Premises By Application Large Enterprises, SMEs Geographic Segmentation -North America (USA, Canada, Mexico) -Europe (Germany, UK, France, Russia, Italy, Rest of Europe) -Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, South Korea, India, Southeast Asia, Rest of Asia-Pacific) -South America (Brazil, Argentina, Columbia, Rest of South America) -The Middle East and Africa (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Nigeria, South Africa, Rest of MEA) Prudent Markets provides attractive discounts that fit your needs. Customization of the reports as per your requirement is also offered. Get in touch with our sales team, who will guarantee you a report that suits your needs. Speak To Our Analyst For A Discussion On The Above Findings, And Ask For A Discount On The Report @ https://www.prudentmarkets.com/discount-request/9169178/ Key Benefits of the Report: This study presents the analytical depiction of the Enterprise IT Management Software Industry along with the current trends and future estimations to determine the imminent investment pockets. The report presents information related to key drivers, restraints, and opportunities along with detailed analysis of the Enterprise IT Management Software Market share. The current market is quantitatively analyzed from to highlight the Global Gardening Pots Market growth scenario. Porter's five forces analysis illustrates the potency of buyers & suppliers in the market. The report provides a detailed Enterprise IT Management Software Market analysis based on competitive intensity and how the competition will take shape in coming years. Key poles of the TOC: Chapter 1 Enterprise IT Management Software Market Business Overview Chapter 2 Major Breakdown by Type Chapter 3 Major Application Wise Breakdown (Revenue & Volume) Chapter 4 Manufacture Market Breakdown Chapter 5 Sales & Estimates Market Study Chapter 6 Key Manufacturers Production and Sales Market Comparison Breakdown Chapter 8 Manufacturers, Deals and Closings Market Evaluation & Aggressiveness Chapter 9 Key Companies Breakdown by Overall Market Size & Revenue by Type Chapter 11 Business / Industry Chain (Value & Supply Chain Analysis) Chapter 12 Conclusions & Appendix The report covers the competitive analysis of the market. As the demand is driven by a buyer's paying capacity and the rate of item development, the report shows the important regions that will direct growth. This section exclusively shares insight into the budget reports of big-league members of the market helping key players and new entrants understand the potential of investments in the Global Enterprise IT Management Software Market. It can be better employed by both traditional and new players in the industry for complete know-how of the market. For In-Depth Competitive Analysis - Purchase this Report now at a Complete Table of Contents (Single User License) @ https://www.prudentmarkets.com/checkout/?id=9169178&license_type=su Free Customization on the basis of client requirements on Immediate purchase: 1- Free country-level breakdown of any 5 countries of your interest. 2- Competitive breakdown of segment revenue by market players. Customization of the Report: This report can be customized to meet the client's requirements. Please connect with our sales team (sales@prudentmarkets.com), who will ensure that you get a report that suits your needs. You can also get in touch with our executives on +91 83560 50278 || USA/Canada(Toll Free): 1800-601-6071 to share your research requirements. In conclusion, the Enterprise IT Management Software Market report is a genuine source for accessing the research data which is projected to exponentially grow your business. The report provides information such as economic scenarios, benefits, limits, trends, market growth rates, and figures. SWOT analysis and PESTLE analysis is also incorporated in the report. Contact Us: Allan Carter Andheri, Maharashtra, 400102 USA/Canada(Toll Free): 1800-601-6071 Direct Line: +91 83560 50278 Mail: sales@prudentmarkets.com Web: www.prudentmarkets.com About Us: We are leaders in market analytics, business research, and consulting services for Fortune 500 companies, start-ups, financial & government institutions. Since we understand the criticality of data and insights, we have associated with the top publishers and research firms all specialized in specific domains, ensuring you will receive the most reliable and up to date research data available. To be at our client's disposal whenever they need help on market research and consulting services. We also aim to be their business partners when it comes to making critical business decisions around new market entry, M&A, competitive Intelligence and strategy. This release was published on openPR.A s I write, there’s a window on my laptop screen that is providing a live view of a stampede. It’s logging the numbers of people joining the social network Bluesky . At the moment, the number of registered users is 20.5 million. By the time you read this there will be more than 30 million of them, judging by the rate that people are currently joining. The proximate cause of it is the role that Elon Musk, owner of X (née Twitter), played in the election of Donald Trump, when a significant proportion of the platform’s 200 million-plus users realised that they’d been had – that they had, in effect, been useful idiots for Musk on his path to the centre of political power. There had been an “Xodus” once before – in October 2022, when Musk took over Twitter – as people fled to a new, open-source network called Mastodon , but it was on a much smaller scale. At its peak in November 2022 it had 2.5 million users, but that number has dropped to just under 1 million now. The stampede to Bluesky is on an altogether bigger scale. The puzzle, in a way, is why it took so long for the penny to drop; after all, many X users have been hostile to Musk for quite a while. The answer, in a nutshell, was network effects. They may not have liked the platform, but that’s where everyone was. “Twitter was the place people in my business had to be,” wrote the Nobel laureate and economist Paul Krugman. “What I used Twitter for was to learn from and interact with people possessing real expertise, sometimes in areas I know pretty well, sometimes in areas I don’t, like international relations and climate policy.” But now Krugman is on Bluesky because, he says, it has suddenly “reached critical mass, in the sense that most of the people I want to hear from are now posting there. The raw number of users is still far smaller than X’s, but as far as I can tell, Bluesky is now the place to find smart, useful analysis.” I stopped using Twitter when Musk bought it, tried Mastodon (and was unimpressed) and only recently joined Bluesky. At the moment, it feels eerily like Twitter in its very early days, when the platform enabled one to plug straight into the thought-streams of people one admired. “For now,” as web veteran Ian Bogost put it last week, “Bluesky invokes the feeling of carefree earnestness that once – really and truly – blanketed the internet as a whole.” It does. What’s distinctive about it? Four things. Unlike Mastodon, it’s as easy as Twitter to use. There’s no overall algorithmic curation – you can “roll your own feed”, as someone put it – decide who you want to hear from. Every user is entitled to “free speech” but nobody gets “free reach” via a profit-driven algorithm. And finally, it runs on an open technical protocol that’s accessible to anyone; the underlying philosophy is that social networking is too important for any one company to control it. So anyone with the requisite technical smarts could set up their own network using the protocol. This doesn’t mean that network effects lose their power, but it could be that the momentum of the stampede away from X, plus the power of an open protocol, means that we are seeing the beginning of the “splintering of social media ”. If this has the effect of eroding the monopolistic grip on people’s attention currently enjoyed by Meta, X, LinkedIn and TikTok, then it’ll be a welcome development. At least people will then be freer to choose their favourite hypnotist. But it won’t solve the bigger problem – which is what social media is doing to us and to our societies. The technology is at worst toxic and at best disabling for a democracy’s public sphere. Humans are a social species, but – as Robin Dunbar pointed out aeons ago – there’s a cognitive limit (about 150) to the number of people with whom one can maintain stable social relationships, and it mostly boils down to around 15 souls with whom one has meaningful exchanges. As a species, we didn’t evolve to be constantly talking to everyone. Addiction to social media, though – as Ian Bogost points out – means that we have to pay attention to the multitudes that turn up in our algorithmically curated feeds. Bluesky may make those feeds more congenial, but it won’t change the fact that we are still reduced to communicating in channels with a bandwidth not much wider than that of smoke signals. Here’s where we went wrong Voters to Elites: Do You See Me Now? Interesting New York Times column by David Brooks. It’s a conservative’s apologia pro vita sua . What Decca did next Jessica Mitford’s Escape from Fascism. A nice essay by Noah McCormack in the New Republic on Mitford’s book Hons and Rebels . Things to come What the future looks like from here. Dave Karpf’s perceptive and realistic list of the consequences of Trump’s victory.Congress Debates Maharashtra Poll Defeat Amid Jharkhand VictorySports on TV for Thursday, Dec. 26
Oracle JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Consulting Service Market 2024: A Decade of Phenomenal Growth AheadThe S&P 500 has returned 26% so far this year. But with expectations sky-high, how long can the rally last? Some Wall Street experts warn of muted forward returns, and are making dot-com bubble comparisons. It's been another banner year for the S&P 500 as impressive earnings and improving expectations have propelled the benchmark index to 26% returns since January. But those increasingly rosy expectations are raising concerns among some of Wall Street's top investors and strategists about how sustainable the rally is, and how historically high valuations may impact future returns. A couple of widely followed valuation metrics reflect this very bullish outlook. There's the so-called "Warren Buffett indicator," or the ratio of total stock market capitalization-to-GDP. And then the Shiller cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio for the S&P 500, which is a 10-year rolling average of the index's trailing 12-month PE ratio. Since high valuations are an indication of lofty future expectations, they have historically meant muted returns over the long term. Expectations are either never met, or even if they are, the good performance is already priced in. Bank of America research shows that starting valuations explain 83% of the S&P 500's returns over the following decade. With current valuations sitting at extremes, many market experts have pointed out that returns could be relatively poor ahead. Below are comments that some of the biggest voices in market have made in recent weeks on the matter. David Kostin, chief US equity strategist at Goldman Sachs Kostin said in October that current Shiller CAPE ratio levels for the S&P 500 means the index is likely to return 3% on average over the next decade. For context, that's lower than the risk-free yield on 10-year Treasurys. Here's that outlook shown in chart form. It illustrates well that close relationship between valuations and future market performance that Bank of America mentions. In an interview with Business Insider later in October, Kostin made a couple of comparisons to the dot-com bubble , which peaked in 2000. One is that valuations for the largest stocks in the market are significantly higher than the rest of the S&P 500. Another is that the market cap of the top stock in the index is hundreds of times larger than that of the 75th percentile stock. "We're at a level of concentration in the US market today that we haven't really seen since the tech bubble," Kostin told BI. "It's even more concentrated than it was 20 years ago." Rob Arnott, founder of Research Affiliates Arnott, whose clients include some of the largest institutions on Wall Street, also made dot-com bubble comparisons. While he also sees poor long-term returns ahead for the S&P 500, he said that large-cap growth stocks — which make up much of the index — could suffer a pullback in the near-term. Related stories "This looks and feels like the year 2000 to me," Arnott told BI earlier this month. "Are we likely to see a bear market in the next two years for large-cap growth? Yeah." He said that earnings growth likely won't live up to expectations, and disruptors in AI will take market share from current top firms. Nelson Peltz, cofounder of Trian Partners Peltz said at CNBC's Delivering Alpha conference earlier in November that valuations have become too elevated, and something will come along to knock them down. "Trees don't grow to the sky, definitely not uninterrupted," Peltz said, using an idiom that refers to valuations becoming disconnected from reality. "There will be something that might upset it. I think you've got euphoria from the election." Dave Sekera, chief US market strategist at Morningstar Sekera also said on the day after the election that enthusiasm about Trump's win and the prospect of higher growth was making the market overvalued. "When I look at the market today, it is trading, with today's bump, probably a 3% to 4% premium above fair value," he said. "Now, a lot of investors may say, 'Eh, 3% to 4% doesn't sound like that much from a market point of view,' but when I look at our valuations going back to 2010, less than 20% of the time have we seen the market trade at this much of a premium or more." He urged investors not to get caught up in the hype. "Based on your risk tolerance, I probably wouldn't be making any changes here today," Sekera said. "And when you do make changes, make sure that you're only making changes when there's really a change in your underlying fundamentals and only make changes in your portfolio based on an informed analysis." Bill Smead, the founder of Smead Capital Management Smead, whose value fund has beaten 97% of similar funds over the last 15 years, according to Morningstar data, also said that the post-election trade was exacerbating an already overvalued market . "It's a disaster waiting to happen," he told BI. "We have put the icing on the financial euphoria cake and lit the candle on top." One piece of evidence showing that euphoria is the level of household equity ownership, Smead said. Right now, around 42% of household assets are in equities, the highest level in history. Jeremy Grantham, cofounder of GMO Grantham has been warning of a "super bubble" in stocks for a few years now, and recently reiterated his dire outlook for the market. "Really great things happen in the internet phase, '98-'99. But they overdo it," Grantham said in an interview with Morningstar published October 30."When you have these great developments, they overdo themselves in the short term, they crash in the intermediate term, and then they come out of the wreckage and change the world in the long term. And that's what I expect will happen this time." Grantham called the 2000 and 2008 market declines. David Einhorn, founder of hedge fund Greenlight Capital Einhorn said at CNBC's Delivering Alpha conference that he sees the market doing well in the near-term. But he said there's no denying how high valuations are, calling today's environment the "the most expensive market of all time, as far as I can see, at least since I've been managing." That means that it's probably not the best time to buy in, he said. "This is a really, really, really pricey environment, but it doesn't necessarily make me bearish. Asset prices can trade at the wrong price, and they can trade at the wrong price for a long period of time," Einhorn said. He added: "I just observe that it's a really expensive market that if you buy and hold for a very long period of time, I doubt that this is a great — you'll look back and say this was a great entry point of all of the entry points that you could have." Albert Edwards, the chief global strategist at Societe Generale Edwards, who is known for his regularly bearish outlook and calling the dot-com bubble, hasn't changed his tune. On Thursday, he wrote in a client note that the US stock market capitalization relative to other developed markets has grown to levels seen in prior US market bubbles. "The dominance of US equity in the global indices (MSCI) has now surpassed the early 1970s extreme," Edwards said. "And the valuation gap between the US and Europe has never been this stretched. High valuations and eps optimism leave the US equity market vulnerable to 'bad' news." US stocks' rising PE ratios are also at odds with rising 10-year Treasury yields, he said. "Just look at the equity euphoria back in 2018, which initially shrugged off rising bond yields – until they didn't. The same happened in 2022," he said. "At some point rising bond yields will just as surely begin to hurt equities."
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BRASILIA, Nov 21 (Reuters) - Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro plotted a coup to overturn the 2022 election along with dozens of ex-ministers and senior aides, federal police said in a formal accusation filed on Thursday with the country's Supreme Court. The final police report caps a nearly two-year investigation into Bolsonaro's role in the election-denying movement that culminated in riots by his supporters that swept the capital Brasilia in January 2023, just a week after his rival President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva took office. Many protesters at the time said they wanted to create chaos to justify a military coup, which they considered imminent. Earlier this week, police arrested five conspirators suspected of planning to assassinate Lula before he took office. Investigators found evidence Bolsonaro knew of that alleged plan, according to a police source familiar with the probe. Bolsonaro said on social media that investigators and the Supreme Court judge overseeing the case had been "creative" and done "everything the law does not say," adding that he would have to look closer at the formal police accusation. His lawyer told Reuters he would wait to see the report before commenting. The formal police accusations against Bolsonaro are a fresh blow to his plan to run for president in 2026 . U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's recent victory had buoyed Bolsonaro allies trying to overturn a court decision that has blocked him from public office for attacking the legitimacy of the 2022 vote. With the police report now filed with the Supreme Court, the country's prosecutor general will decide whether to press charges against Bolsonaro and 36 others accused of criminal organization to violently overthrow the democratic order. Among the accused are two of Bolsonaro's former defense ministers, including his 2022 running mate, retired General Walter Braga Netto; his former national security adviser, retired General Augusto Heleno; former navy commander Almir Garnier Santos; and former Justice Minister Anderson Torres. Lawmaker Alexandre Ramagem, who ran the Brazilian spy agency ABIN, and the head of Bolsonaro's right-wing Liberal Party, Valdemar Costa Neto, were also among the accused named in a federal police statement. Lawyers for Heleno and Torres and aides to Ramagem and Braga Netto declined to comment. Representatives for Garnier Santos and Costa Neto did not immediately respond to questions. Brazil's Defense Ministry, army and navy did not immediately respond to requests for comment. ARRESTS THIS WEEK Police on Tuesday arrested five people suspected of involvement in the assassination plot targeting Lula, then president-elect, and his running mate Geraldo Alckmin, days before they took office. Lula, speaking at the presidential palace on Thursday, said he was lucky to be alive. "The attempt to poison me and Alckmin didn't work and here we are," he said. Tuesday's arrests included retired Brigadier General Mario Fernandes, who was a deputy minister in Bolsonaro's cabinet. Police said they found in his possession a document outlining the plan that had been printed at the presidential palace. A police source said investigators had confirmed Bolsonaro was at the presidential palace when the document was printed, and they had identified conversations between his associates suggesting the former president was aware of the plot. Three active duty officers arrested on Tuesday had special forces training. Bolsonaro, a hard-right politician who had been an army captain, filled the top tiers of his government with military officers. Bolsonaro never recognized his October 2022 electoral defeat and he left Brazil days before Lula's inauguration for Florida. He eventually returned to Brazil and surrendered his passport to police investigating his role in the January 2023 capital riots, when supporters stormed and vandalized the Supreme Court, Congress and the executive presidential palace. Earlier this year, federal police finished separate criminal probes of Bolsonaro and his associates, formally accusing them of tampering with COVID-19 vaccination cards while in office and of embezzling jewelry gifted by the Saudi government. He denied wrongdoing in both cases. A person close to Brazil's Prosecutor General Paulo Gonet said he is likely to consider the result of all three probes targeting the former president before making a decision on presenting charges, without any clear deadline. (Reporting by Ricardo Brito in BrasiliaAdditional reporting by Andre Romani, Luana Maria Benedito, Eduardo Simoes and Luciana Magalhaes in Sao Paulo, and Lisandra Paraguassu in BrasiliaWriting by Anthony BoadleEditing by Brad Haynes and Rosalba O'Brien)Dublin Mid-West General Election 2024 updates: Sinn Féin’s Eoin Ó Broin would ‘relish opportunity to fix housing’ as he’s elected on first count
Formula one, two: Meet the Perth twins driving the next generation in STEMGrowing up watching TV shows like MythBusters and Top Gear was the match that sparked the engineering careers of Perth twins Morgan and Ashley Ure. With matching double degrees in mechatronics and engineering, the 25-year-olds turn heads as they help design and build the Scitech Discovery Centre displays that engage minds young and old in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Ashley and Morgan will speak to the design, mechanics and history of the race car, and will offer personal insights into the life of an ECU student engineer and a woman in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine fields. Credit: Scitech Earlier in 2024 they were part of a student racing team that took first place against 55 countries at Europe’s most established educational engineering competition – Formula Student. Back on home soil, the pair dived right back into promoting WA science. Morgan, a software engineer, and Ashley, an electrical engineer, are now inspiring the next generation of thinkers with talks on their winning design now running weekly during the school holidays at Scitech. “Our parents really encouraged us both in not just maths and science, but also other pursuits like arts, gymnastics, dancing and music,” Ashley said. “That definitely led to a well-rounded understanding that STEM is a part of so many different things.” Weighing in at a feather-light 164 kilograms, the custom-built Wilson Resolute race car can reach 100km/h in under four seconds. Its innovative rear suspension system, coupled with an efficient aerodynamics package and lightweight composite construction means the vehicle is especially nimble. Morgan designed and built the car’s steering wheel from scratch. More than purely building the car, the team has to incorporate design, marketing and budgeting skills into the project. “It’s a massive undertaking, it’s a holistic view of what it would be like to work in an engineering job,” Morgan said. “It’s not just necessarily getting to design cool things, it’s also about how can I work this all together to finish this project on time and on budget?” The budget for the build was $30,000, but the girls estimate the true cost if it included labour time would have amounted to more than $1 million. After three years of studying, working part-time and taking on Formula Student as extracurricular, they’re both now eager to dedicate time-sharing their knowledge and passion for women in science, following in the footsteps of their role model, distinguished neuroscientist and 2015 West Australian of the Year, Lyn Beazley. Ashley (left) and Morgan Ure are paving the way for young engineers. Credit: Scitech “There’s definitely been growth in the amount of women getting into engineering, but it’s not as fast as some industries would have hoped, but you do get to meet a few people that are very much like you and have that same sort of drive as you,” Morgan said. “Even though you may not see quite as many women in engineering, there’s absolutely no barriers and everyone that we’ve met through university and Scitech has been really supportive,” Ashley followed. Currently, Morgan is designing and building a radio astronomy exhibit that will feature in Scitech’s new gallery titled Here, There and Everywhere . Ashley is also working on a display in the exhibition called virus box, a visual and physical representation of how a virus spreads within a community. “What I love about the exhibits that we get to make is seeing them put out on the floor and somebody interacting with them,” Morgan said. “It’s just really incredible, it’s not only satisfying to see the thing that you’ve been making working, it’s seeing somebody else visit and enjoying it and learning something from it.” “It’s just a really good feeling.” The month-long collaboration between ECU and Scitech to display the race car will include interactive talks from Ashley and Morgan. They will speak to the design, mechanics and history of the race car, and will offer personal insights into the life of an ECU student engineer and a woman in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine fields. Get the day’s breaking news, entertainment ideas and a long read to enjoy. Sign up to receive our Evening Edition newsletter.
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