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<rss version="2.0"><channel><id>50</id><title>IT and Ecommerce</title><description></description><link>http://www.assuredrecruit.com</link><generator>KohanaPHP</generator><item><title>Web users stop searching.</title><description>A recent IAB Europe and insights Consultancy report found that 40% of European web users stop searching after the first 10 results, and as much as 70% after the first 20. This new revelation on European web surfer's impatience highlights the need for sites to have a greater focus on their rankings.</description><link>http://mvc.digipigeon.com/</link><language>en-gb</language><copyright></copyright><managingeditor></managingeditor><webmaster></webmaster><pubDate>2010-01-12 15:06:00</pubDate><category></category></item><item><title>Oracle reports strong Q2 financials.</title><description>Oracle reports strong Q2 financials.
Oracle has announced that its second-quarter revenues exceeded its own expectations with a rise of four per cent to &#xA3;3.64m.
The company's net income rose by 12 per cent to &#xA3;931m, while earnings per share grew by 15 per cent compared with last year.
Oracle said that the results were substantially higher than expected, and had helped deliver the company's highest ever Q2 operating margins, creating &#xA3;5.19m of free cash flow over the past 12 months.
New software licence revenues were up two per cent to &#xA3;1bn, and software licence updates and product support revenues rose 14 per cent to &#xA3;1.9bn.
The company said it had also seen growth of one per cent in the Americas, and two per cent in Asia Pacific, in its applications business.
The figures suggest that the anti-competition concerns of the European Commission (EC) into Oracle's takeover of Sun Microsystems has not affected the company's position, despite the issue lasting all year.
Oracle also expects to see Sun rapidly improve its market share and margins once the merger closes.
The EC objected to the fact that Oracle, the largest proprietary database vendor, is buying Sun, the owner of MySQL, the most popular open-source database on the market.
Oracle argued that it will not threaten competition because its own database products are aimed at a different type of customer to Sun's.
The EC will announce its ruling on 19 January.</description><link>http://mvc.digipigeon.com/</link><language>en-gb</language><copyright></copyright><managingeditor></managingeditor><webmaster></webmaster><pubDate>2009-12-21 12:00:00</pubDate><category></category></item></channel></rss>
