« AccMan: Just how far are we on the saas/on-demand journey | Main | The unprofitability of the SaaS business is an illusion caused by growth »

October 08, 2007

Integration infrastructure approaches adjust to new world of SaaS and shared services

Funny, just as I blogged about the requirement for SaaS solution to integrate / be interoperable, there's a blogpost by ZDNet's Dana Gardner on this subject (at least in the order I read the info :-) ).

Althought this article / podcast was sponsored by Cape Clear Software, it illustrates this topic of being one of the most important for SaaS ...

... Read a full transcript of the discussion. Sponsor: Cape Clear Software.

Change is afoot for the role and requirements of integration for modern software-as-a-service (SaaS) providers and enterprises adopting shared services models. Reuse is becoming an important issue, as are patterns of automation.

The notion of reuse of integration — with added emphasis on integration as a service — has prompted a different approach to integration infrastructure. The new demand is driven by ecologies of services, some from the Web “cloud,” as well as the need to efficiently scale the delivery of services and applications composed of many disparate component services.

Integrations require reusable patterns, high performance, as well as many different means of access from clients. As a result Cape Clear Software has this week unveiled a new major version of its enterprise service bus (ESB), Cape Clear 7.5, with an emphasis on:

  • A new graphical editor, the SOA Assembly Editor, an Eclipse-based tool to graphically clip together elements of integrations.
  • Multi-tenanting additions to the ESB that allow segmentation of integrations, data, and reporting, as well as segmenting use and reuse of integrations on reporting and management of integrations based on the identities of inbound customers, clients, or businesses.
  • A Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) management system with tools to monitor transactions, and repair transactions when they fail, to allow for rebuilding previous business information and ensure transactional integrity in running and maintaining large enterprise-class BPEL deployments.

To help better understand the new landscape for integration models, I recently moderated a sponsored podcast discussion with Phil Wainewright, an independent consultant, director of Procullux Ventures, and fellow ZDNet SaaS blogger, as well as Annrai O’Toole, CEO of Cape Clear Software. ...

Source: Integration infrastructure approaches adjust to new world of SaaS and shared services
Athor: Dana Gardner
Data Published: Tue, 25 Sep 2007

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In.

Design by Ewebscapes