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Technology Stocks : RATIONAL SOFTWARE- BUY OR HOLD -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Vijay Raghavan who wrote (2706)10/26/1998 10:16:00 PM
From: treetopflier  Respond to of 3115
 
Thread: Well these guys certainly can self promote!

My broker at Pru, of all places, recommended this stock way back in Feb/Mar of this year. My broker just learned that Send on his keyboard doesn't operate the fax machine (no offense Bob).

Point is that was a sure sign that RATL had mastered the art of self promotion and managing the analysts.

Pru is TOTALLY braindead on the tech sector. For them to recommend anything means someone spent a lot of time with them.

Now if VB and VC++ will just take over the world RATL is set ;)

Good for y'all!

ttf



To: Vijay Raghavan who wrote (2706)10/29/1998 7:16:00 AM
From: Vijay Raghavan  Respond to of 3115
 
Rational tests e-commerce apps
By Randy Weston
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 28, 1998, 7:20 a.m. PT

E-commerce and the Internet are getting a
good ration of testing tools.

Rational Software in Cupertino, California,
is rolling out a new suite of testing tools
designed to let companies make sure their
Java applications and e-commerce services
work as intended.

Called Rational TeamTest 7, the latest
version of the firm's testing software
comes with tools for
e-commerce,
iterative test
management against
project
requirements, and
deeper integration
with other Rational
tools like the recently announced
PerformanceStudio for load testing, and
DevelopmentDeskTop for reliability
testing.

"We were especially interested in single
automated software quality [testing
systems] that could test the Java in any
browser, as well as our C++ and Visual
Basic components," said Aretha Adams,
software quality assurance engineer at
DuPont Photomasks. "We surveyed the
market for a good electronic commerce
testing [systems], and Rational's TeamTest
7 is the first we found that did a reliable
job with Java and Dynamic HTML."

Rational's new e-commerce testing tools
are designed to let users test Java and
Dynamic HTML products in a browser in
the manner an end-user would actually use
the application. The system records the
activity of the Java application so
engineers and developers can play back
the activity and make changes as needed.

The testing tool also takes advantage of
the World Wide Web Consortium's
Document Object Model, a standard
object modeling system developed by the
Internet standards organization.

"Previous testing technologies have treated
HTML Web pages as static environments
and have not worked accurately for
e-commerce, where most Web pages are
generated automatically in response to
interaction with the Web-site visitor," said
Rational executives in a prepared
statement. "Rational TeamTest 7 correctly
tests every user transaction uniquely,
because it uses object technology to
correctly identify all the properties [such as
target links] of Dynamic HTML objects."

The product is scheduled to be ready the
first quarter of 1999 for approximately
$3,995. Rational is still considering
whether to give free upgrades to customers
of Rational SQA Suite TeamTest 6.1 with
active maintenance agreements.

In related news, Rational will also
announce next week that its Rational
Robot 7 testing software will be used
internally by PeopleSoft to test
PeopleSoft's Java client and Web-based
self-service applications. The
announcement will be made at
PeopleSoft's user group conference being
held next week in San Francisco.