FatWire Software
Company type
Private
IndustrySoftware & Web Content Management & Web 2.0 Collaboration
FoundedNew York City, USA (1996)
FoundersMark Fasciano, Ari Kahn
SuccessorOracle Corporation (acquired FatWire 2011)
Headquarters
Key people
Yogesh Gupta, CEO
ProductsFatWire Content Server
FatWire TeamUp
FatWire Analytics
FatWire Engage
FatWire Community Server
FatWire Gadget Server
FatWire Mobility Server
FatWire Content Integration Platform
Number of employees
200 (2008)
WebsiteOracle and FatWire

FatWire Software was a privately held company selling web content management system (CMS) software. It was acquired by Oracle Corporation in 2011, and its products rolled up into Oracle's WebCenter product lines.[1]

History

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  • 1996: Established by Mark Fasciano, Ari Kahn and John Murcott,
  • 2003: Acquired Open Market's Enterprise web content management assets including Content Server from divine, founded as FutureTense.[2][3]
  • 2004: Launched Content Server 6.0 WCM software
  • 2007: Yogesh Gupta was named president and CEO in August, acquired Infostoria in October, launched their strategy for Web Experience Management in November.[4]
  • 2010: FatWire and EMC Corporation announced a partnership in which EMC will resell FatWire's products as their strategic Web Experience Management solution. In return FatWire acquired the rights to resell EMC's digital asset management software[5][6][7]
  • 2011: On June 21, 2011, Oracle announced it was acquiring FatWire Software.[8] In July 2011, Oracle purchased Fatwire for $163 million with the assistance of Bingham McCutchen[9]
  • 2012: In February 2012 Oracle releases Oracle WebCenter 11gR1 (11.1.1.6.0) incorporating WebCenter Sites – the new name for Fatwire Content Server.[10]

Market

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FatWire's revenue for 2009 has been estimated to be around $40M by Real Story Group.[11]

Further reading

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References

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  1. ^ Oracle FatWire Acquisition
  2. ^ FatWire acquires divine's content management line. (BI News Review)
  3. ^ FatWire Software: Content Management Takes a divine Turn (page 2) Archived 2011-06-07 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "FatWire Software Acquires Infostoria to Utilize Web 2.0 Technologies". java.sys-con.com. Archived from the original on 2008-09-13.
  5. ^ "FatWire: EMC and FatWire jointly deliver marketing solutions for web experience and brand management". fatwire.com. Archived from the original on 2010-02-19. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  6. ^ "EMC Replaces their WCM with FatWire's Web Experience Management".
  7. ^ Bettering brand management, KMWorld, Feb 17, 2010
  8. ^ "Oracle Buys FatWire Software" (Press release). Oracle Corporation. 2011-06-21. Archived from the original on 2025-09-08. Retrieved 2025-11-09.
  9. ^ "Bingham Closes FatWire Acquisition for Oracle". Archived from the original on 2012-07-19. Retrieved 2012-05-29.
  10. ^ Best Fatwire and WebCenter Sites Resources
  11. ^ Would EMC really buy FatWire? Archived 2010-02-21 at the Wayback Machine, Real Story Group
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

FW

series FatWire, a vendor of content management system Focke-Wulf, a German aircraft manufacturer F+W, a media and e-commerce company FatWire, a vendor

Open Market

the TRANSACT product. FatWire Software acquired Open Market's content management business from the Divine bankruptcy. FatWire has extended the Open Market

Edge Side Includes

Interwoven, Inc., Open Market, whose ESI-related technology is now owned by FatWire Software, Oracle Corporation and Vignette Corporation) developed the ESI

Divine, Inc.

Saratoga Partners then sold the enterprise content management business to FatWire. The Open Market patents were acquired by Soverain Software. "divine, inc

List of acquisitions by Oracle

[34] July 21, 2011 Ksplice Rebootless Linux kernel updates [35] June 2011 FatWire Software Web Content and Web Experience Management (WCM and WEM) Software

Content Management Interoperability Services

Participants in the process include Adobe Systems Incorporated, Alfresco, EMC, FatWire, HP, IBM, Liferay, Microsoft, Nuxeo, OpenText, Oracle, and SAP. The standard

Folio Corporation

2004 FutureTense, and associated Open Market technologies were part of FatWire Software Corporation, owners of UpdateEngine, a Java-based content management

General Sentiment

Skiena, a PhD in computer science, and Mark Fasciano, who also founded FatWire. The underlying technology platform, a natural language processing (NLP)