Independent software vendor (ISV) is a business term for companies specializing in making or selling software, designed for mass marketing or for niche markets. Such markets may be diverse including software for real estate brokers, scheduling for healthcare personnel, barcode scanning, stock maintenance and even child care management software.
Specialized products generally offer higher productivity to organizations than more generalized software such as basic spreadsheet or database packages.
Most large software companies, including Microsoft and IBM, have special programs for ISVs.
An ISV makes and sells software products that run on one or more computer hardware or operating system platforms. The companies that make the platforms, such as Software AG, salesforce.com, BEA Systems, Microsoft, Novell, IBM, Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard, and Apple, encourage and lend support to ISVs, often with special "business partner" programs.
In general, the more applications that run on a platform, the more value it offers to customers. Of course, platform manufacturers such as Microsoft and IBM make applications as well, but don't have the resources and, in many cases, the special knowledge required, to make them all.
Some ISVs focus on a particular operating system, such as IBM's small business AS/400, for which there are thousands of ISV applications. Other ISVs specialize in a particular application area, such as engineering, and develop software primarily for high-end Unix-based workstation platforms.
ISVs make and sell software that is added to platforms. Original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) use hardware platform components to build larger products. Value-added resellers (VARs) incorporate platform software into their own software product packages.
According to the Institute for Partner Education & Development, at least 50 percent of an Independent Software Vendor’s revenue comes from the development of proprietary software solutions or applications. They have expertise in standard market platforms (Windows, Unix, Linux, MAC OS) and large business software solutions
Computers :- Beside referring to manufacturers, OEM can be used as an adjective to describe software licensed only for a particular system. OEM software is purchased alongside a system or hardware parts. OEM software is often cheaper than the full versions but not as cheap as academic or student editions.
OEM hardware is hardware packaged for computer administrator and builder use. These products are normally plain boxed and often don't come with any instructions or references provided in retail packages. Technical support for such "OEM products" is usually the responsibility of the reseller, rather than of the manufacturer. OEM hardware is also called bulk hardware.
Operating systems :- There are two types of OEM when it comes to operating systems. The first is when a pre-built computer is purchased, there is an OEM disk that comes with the system, which can not be transferred to another one, because that disk is designed to run only with the specific system components. The second type of OEM operating system is one that can be transferred to any other system, without the dependence on the components.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
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