| InfoWorld Daily AM | | | The tech industry is littered with companies and products that dominated the marketplace only to fall to competitors or changing tastes after only a few years (or maybe even months). Join us on a tour of seemingly unassailable tech empires that crumbled with remarkable speed. | | | Issue highlights 1. Apple, Google, or Microsoft? Your platform will dictate your office app 2. Suse drops LibreOffice -- and Collabora picks it up 3. Introducing InfoWorld's TechBrief newsletter | | White Paper: Prophix Software Inc. Financial planning, budgeting, and forecasting are three critical processes to define goals and serve as the roadmap to achieve these goals. Learn More | | We seem to be moving to a world where you'll realistically have a choice of just iWork on iOS and OS X, Quickoffice on Chrome OS (and perhaps iOS and Android tablets), and Office on Windows and (in a limited version) OS X. READ MORE | | Although an independent project, LibreOffice has relied on Suse for commercial support, which Collabora will now handle. READ MORE | | Before most people are out of bed, we scan hundreds of sources of tech news and analysis, pluck excerpts from the best articles, and roll them all into a single email containing a couple of dozen items. Just read InfoWorld TechBrief from end to end and you're ready for the day. READ MORE | | White Paper: Dell VMware With a need to deploy a scalable IT foundation to support growth and provide maximum availability and performance, they built a new converged data center based on Dell and VMware that has enabled them to reduce data center costs by 60%, securely connect their VPN network of 84 locations, and ship cargo to its destinations faster. Learn More | | | | |