Showing posts with label HP SOA Systinet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HP SOA Systinet. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

When Mashing Your Enterprise, It Pays To Have a Lot of Friends

It has been almost a year since IBM’s Mashup Eco-System Summit and we noted at the time that there was some confusion among the attendees as to what truly defined an enterprise mashup. Since then we’ve defined the 5Cs of Enterprise Mashups and, more recently, outlined practical examples like the 7 Mashups Every Company Needs. But there’s one thing we’ve always been certain about: no single vendor can address the entire enterprise mashup problem alone. It is critical to catalyze mashups in the enterprise with an ecosystem that surrounds those mashups, making them easier and more secure.

So I’m happy to write that today JackBe announced our Presto Mashup Ready (PMR) program, an ecosystem of partners that provide real value-adding integrations and services to the enterprise mashup consumer. We took a rigorous and systematic look at the actors that can influence the success (or failure) of mashups in the enterprise. The result is that we have an amazing group of inaugural partners that are all working to bring enterprise mashups to the proverbial next level --- a level which, in my opinion, will help make enterprise mashups even easier and more secure.

I could write an entire blog about each partner but I expect in all cases you will recognize and appreciate the value these industry leaders bring to a mashup ecosystem. First and foremost are the Mashup Enablers, Xignite and StrikeIron, that provide business data as reliable SaaS-type services. If you need data from public websites, Dapper provides webclipping to fill the “web page to data” gap needed for many enterprise mashups.

But there's even more to the 'mashup enablement' part of this story and you’ll see other Enablers that might be a surprise. You may not think of a database as a SOA-style service, but JackBe’s 2007 Mashup Market Survey showed that 78% of mashup initiatives had databases as an important data source, far exceeding the other types: RSS, REST, and WSDL/SOAP. So EnterpriseDB, and it’s ability to run on Amazon’s Elastic Cloud, make it a perfect mashup fit (more on EDB, EC2 and JackBe later this year, wink wink). And in case you thought webservices were just for the servers, OpenSpan’s technology lets you expose your desktop applications as webservices, which in mashup-speak means it’s a mashable service.

Beyond enablement, everyone agrees that security and governance are must-haves for mashups in the enterprise. For Mashup Governance we’ve turned to Layer7 for their service access security and HP SOA Systinet for their SOA governance. And we recognize that mashups are not always an end unto themselves. Sure we can deliver ‘mashlets’ (aka mashup widgets), but sometimes the mashup is part of a bigger puzzle. Our Mashup Interface (aka Rich Internet Application) partners, Ext JS and Backbase, can provide a face to mashups that really brings them to life.

Finally, it makes prudent sense to bring in the architect professionals who really understand the sophisticated nature of the enterprise. We’re proud to have Mashup Integrator Partner as part of the PMR Program: Capgemini, NuWave Solutions and MomentumSI. Capgemini brings in a wealth of knowledge in providing customers with business and technology strategy. NuWave Solutions is a well-respected BEA Portal Solution provider and MomentumSI is the SOA expert who knows how to architect SOAs and their enterprise mashup cousins.

I hope you are as excited about the Presto Mashup Ready Program as we are. As far as I know this is the first enterprise mashup partner program in the industry and its a milestone we are proud to be a part of. If you’d like to hear from the partners themselves we have some great quotes from our partners on our website. And I’d encourage those interested in becoming a PMR Partner to apply online.

It does take a village to raise an enterprise mashup. We’re proud to be the first mayor.

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Thursday, February 14, 2008

Enterprise Mashups without Governance = 10 to Life

Darryl Taft at eWeek just published a good recap of the opening panel discussion from this week’s Webservices/SOA on Wallstreet Conference, ‘Enterprise Mashups For Wall Street – Leveraging SOA and Web 2.0’. I was also at the show and had a chance to listen to the panel discussion live. The best part of the discussion was when the conversation went down the path of Innovation versus Governance.

During this thread, an interesting statement was made by Rene Bonvanie, SVP of Marketing at Serena. Darryl wrote that Rene said; 'governance should take a back seat to innovation’. Boy, was this the wrong thing to say to a financial audience where governance is #1 on IT’s priority list! We all know if you don’t enforce governance in the financial services sector, you and your office mates may spend some some time in prison. Just ask the folks at Societe Generale about their US$7.14 billion fraud.

Of course innovation and governance are not mutually exclusive. Actually, when it comes to enterprise mashups, strong governance fosters innovation, not suppresses it. With strong governance in place, you can actually open up more data. And we’re very proud to say that we’ve been talking about governance from the day one, even making it the very centerpiece of our 5 rules to making mashups work in the enterprise.

JackBe’s enterprise mashup platform, Presto, is built on a deep security and governance foundation that ensures adherence to IT’s requirements while still empowering the business user with robust mashup capabilities. And coincidentally, we recently added even more governance functionality to Presto through our Presto Connector for HP SOA Systinet. We’re not talking about rhetoric here but a real, tangible governance solution for mashups.

Luckily, the other panel members didn’t have the same view as Bonvanie. They all believed governance was paramount and would actually accelerate innovation and SOA adoption. Cheers to them!

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Monday, January 28, 2008

Practical Mashups

Mashups don’t live alone. They connect to a dizzying array of information sources, both public and private, and deliver just-in-time answers to all sorts of destinations. Last quarter I took part in a cool project to integrate Jackbe’s Presto into WSRP-compliant portals like Oracle Portal/WebCenter, IBM WebSphere, BEA WebLogic, and the like. It was, in my opinion, a practical example of where mashups can add meaningful value in an enterprise. And I am proud to say that I’ve just completed yet another cool-yet-practical integration. JackBe’s Presto is now integrated with HP SOA Systinet through the HP Governance Interoperability Framework (GIF).

Imagine this: you use your friendly BEA/Oracle/Sonic/IBM ESB to create a new service endpoint against a database. But then what? Sure you can share it with the folks in the nearby cubicles in a direct ‘lemme email ya the WSDL’ kind of way. But any good enterprise architect knows this doesn’t work in any real enterprise. How would your 500 or 5,000 enterprise mashers (or your 50 developers for that matter) find this new service endpoint? And how do they know what it represents? And how can you ensure that only permitted users mash with it? And what happens when you make version 2, 3 or 4 of that service?

At JackBe we get asked these practical questions all the time and the industry experts talk about them quite a bit too. Our friend Dion Hinchcliffe, in his post 'The top10 challenges facing enterprise mashups', discusses governance, security and version control as some of the most important issues you need to tackle before your mashup effort is enterprise-ready. And Clint Boulton at eWeek wrote a well-titled article, ‘Mashups Show Promise but Require IT Governance’, on this topic just last week.

And now JackBe mashups can be created from secure and governed SOA services. Good and practical. We’re thrilled that HP has helped us address a common concern about mashups in the enterprise. HP and JackBe will be holding a webcast to discuss and demonstrate our new integration on March 12; you can register here.

I’ve got other projects in the works. Just wait until you hear what’s next!

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