Briefs

FRAMINGHAM (02/18/2000) - Santa Clara startup BoldFish Inc. next month plans to ship a high-volume outbound mail server designed for e-commerce marketing. The SMTP-based server software, which runs on Windows NT or Unix, can blast out 500,000 messages per hour, according to the company. The software can also manage any "bounce-back" messages that don't reach intended recipients, the company says.

The BoldFish software starts at about $30,000.

BoldFish: www.boldfish.com

Ironside Technologies Inc. next month will ship IronWorks 4.0, a new edition of the $250,000 e-commerce gateway for managing end-user interactions with the Web and back-end enterprise resource planning systems. Available for Windows NT, OS/400, HP-UX, Solaris and AIX, IronWorks 4.0 adds access support for the Palm VII handheld device. IronWorks 4.0 also includes an XML interface called "Ironside Access" that can be used to link to supply-chain software from Ariba, RightWorks, Commerce One and Claris. Ironside is based in Pleasanton, Calif.

Ironside: www.ironside.com

RosettaNet, the high-tech industry consortium seeking to build XML-based trading document specifications for use in business-to-business e-commerce, last week named a new CEO.

Jennifer Hamilton, director of e-business at Quantum, takes on the job of coordinating technical development at RosettaNet, which saw its first CEO, Fadi Chehade, leave last month to form an XML document-processing startup.

RosettaNet: www.rosettanet.org.

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