Hybrid applications made
up of proprietary, open
source and third-party
components are the result
of today's fast-paced and
complex software
development landscape.
Applications developed
within the last five
years - whether internal
or external - are at
least 50% open source
software (OSS) and
third-party components.
PrismTech announced that
the two open-source
middleware communities
are merging their CORBA
Component Model (CCM)
initiatives, underpinning
the company's OpenFusion
CCM offering. The
Distributed Object
Computing (DOC) Group and
the OW2 Consortium - with
support and contribution
from PrismTech - are
combining their efforts
to advance the
development and
deployment of CCM
technology.
Last summer, a group of
technical experts from
various open source
companies came together
under the banner of the
Open Solutions Alliance,
rolled out an
enterprise-class
application, and
demonstrated the power of
collaboration with the
launch of the Common
Customer View project, an
interoperability project
that integrates data from
diverse front-office,
back-office, and planning
applications.
The Group discussed open
source trends in systems
management. Panel
participants discussed
both the benefits and
precautions to take when
investigating open source
management software. Nora
Denzel recently retired
from Hewlett Packard as
the senior vice president
and general manager of
HP's over one-billion
dollar software division.
At HP, Denzel led one of
the most dramatic
turn-arounds in the
software industry by
reinvigorating HP?s
OpenView and OpenCall
software product lines
through both internal
product development and
the successful
integration of over eight
acquisitions. During her
tenure as HP?s software
chief, software sales
more than doubled the
bottom line improved by
over 72%. She has been
named as one of the top
20 'Storage Movers and
Shakers' by Storage, Inc.
magazine and one of the
most powerful people in
networking by Network
World magazine.
In corporate
environments, being able
to integrate with
existing systems is of
extreme importance. Due
to its nature, the open
source development
methodology forces
software developers to be
prepared to interoperate
and integrate with
whatever is already
there. This is a big
difference from the more
traditional black box
software mentality, and a
huge benefit for
enterprise customers. In
this session, Hippo CTO
Arjé Cahn will introduce
Hippo CMS, an Open Source
Enterprise Content
Management system, and
dive into the details of
fitting a CMS into your
environment.
The success of open
source software has been
placing pressure on the
business models of
proprietary software
vendors. In response,
many software vendors
have shifted from a
paid-for license model to
an open source business
model. This presentation
will explore the emerging
trend of proprietary
software vendors
transitioning to an open
source business model -
the elimination of
software licensing fees,
source-code transparency,
and a reliance on
services as the revenue
engine. It will cover the
impact on software
vendors and end users
alike, and will include
best practices from a
number of companies that
have already made the
transition, including
failed attempts.
Today's identity
management systems help
organizations gain
control over identity
information in the
enterprise, however,
these systems are silos -
and despite industry
standards, there is very
little interoperability.
The Bandit project
provides open-source
identity services that
reduce the challenges of
identity silos to provide
a consistent approach to
identity management for
users and administrators,
regardless of underlying
systems. To continue this
evolution in open-source,
Bandit has partnered with
the Higgins project to
deliver an open-source
identity system that is
interoperable with
Windows CardSpace. This
session will demo this
development milestone and
explain its significance
in the identity
community.
While enterprise open
source vendors continue
to debate the definition
of 'open,' customers are
listening. Not because
they care as much about
what open source business
model a particular vendor
uses but because our
debates give them reason
to be confused and to
consider the FUD that is
pushed into the
marketplace. The Open
Solutions Alliance is a
nonprofit vendor neutral
organization that exists
for one purpose: to
address CIOs most
pressing issue today -
interoperability among
open solutions. While the
customers have been
listening to us, the OSA
has been listening very
intently to them. This
session will discuss what
CIOs are looking for in
open solutions vendors
and how they expect it to
be delivered based on
real discussions and work
sessions.
When it comes to Content
Management Solutions
(CMS), 'one size' does
not fit all. When
considering open source
CMS for a real-world
client experience, it's
necessary to focus on the
project needs, evaluate
various CMS solutions in
the context of these
project needs, and to
explore experiences with
the strengths and
weaknesses of the
solutions.
ILOG announced ILOG
JViews 8, the latest
version of ILOG?s
award-winning Java-based
visualization suite that
enhances the creation of
Rich Internet
Applications (RIA) and
desktop applications for
supervision and
monitoring. ILOG JViews
8.1 introduces a new
presentation layer for
the Eclipse platform and
dramatic performance
improvements for both
desktop and Web
applications to enhance
the user experience of
the most demanding
applications.
Sun Microsystems, Inc and
the NetBeans community
announced the
availability of the
award-winning NetBeans
6.0 Integrated
Development Environment
(IDE). NetBeans 6.0 IDE
extends support beyond
Java by providing a rich
set of features for
C/C++, JavaScript and the
Ruby language, including
Ruby on Rails - further
enhancing developer
productivity with
multiple languages and
ease of use.
Open source has made
significant inroads into
middleware deployments in
the enterprise. More and
more, open source is
being used to deliver the
benefits of SOA and open
source to the enterprise.
This session explores
where open source is
getting the most traction
in SOA deployments and
illustrates this by
describing some of the
customer SOA solutions
the speaker sees at Red
Hat.
Today's Web service
providers must understand
Quality of Service,
filtering techniques and
implement QOS and access
list filters on their
networks. A proper QOS
and filtering design
helps to avoid network
bottlenecks caused by
worm and virus
infections, sudden spikes
in traffic, broadband
users, file sharing, and
other network conditions.
Service providers can use
QOS and filtering
techniques to align
network usage with
business policies and
requirements, all while
still serving customers
and supporting their own
back office needs. This
presentation covers the
key concepts of quality
of service and
access-list filtering
using open source tools.
The presentation includes
an explanation of
filtering using Linux's
iptables tool and
standard queuing methods
as defined in the
Differentiated Services
RFC as well as
applications of these
methods through generic
case studies.
SOA is becoming the
prevailing choice for IT
enterprises and the
success of this
transition to an SOA is
based on quality of the
SOA governance solution.
This session will
highlight why SOA
governance is crucial for
the successful transition
to SOA. It will also
discuss how to build
policy enforcement
contracts that can
customize how service
consumers and producers
are able interact with
existing enterprise
services. The session
will explore how
enterprise architects and
developers can build and
leverage an SOA
governance strategy in
order to manage, share,
and enforce policies
around the key service
artifacts across the
enterprise. It will show
how to effectively manage
the design, execution,
and management aspects of
the governance
infrastructure. Michael
will focus on tips, best
practices, and strategies
on how to develop policy
enforcement contracts
that can be decorated
across internal or
external services in the
enterprise enhancing the
value of the SOA.
According to Gartner, 80
percent of data transfer
is done via FTP. A
time-consuming and
unreliable process born
from the mainframe, FTP
regularly impacts
e-commerce and supply
chain orders and
processes, unnecessarily
disrupting business and
jeopardizing revenue. ESB
alleviates the latency of
batch data processing,
eliminates data transfer
inefficiencies, and is
reliable even in the
'chattiest' networks.
There will also be
discussion of how
enterprises can best
leverage the benefits of
ESB within their SOA
strategy.
This session will dive
straight into the middle
of a real-world open
source SOA
implementations, showing
how all the facets of how
the SOA Big Rules are
attained within the
solution. This will cover
an in-depth walkthrough,
by example and demos, of:
How to implement large
XML Schema-driven
document/literal Web
services using partly
Java EE 5 and partly J2EE
1.4; How security is
enabled through
certificate-based
authentication with
WS-Security; How the
services are orchestrated
with WS-BPEL; and how
JSR-168 portlets leverage
the end-user experience
and how these are exposed
using WSRP. The solution
is based strictly on open
source software and a
guide for picking the
right frameworks and the
right products in the
myriad of these will be
addressed as well.
Prerequisites: Knowledge
of Java technology, IDEs,
XML, and an interest in
SOA.
Apache Tuscany provides
an open source services
infrastructure for
building SOA. It's based
on the widely supported
Service Component
Architecture (SCA)
specification. With the
Tuscany implementation of
SCA, application
developers can easily
create or reuse services
in different languages
(BPEL, Java or various
scripting languages) and
assemble and deploy them
in a distributed
environment. This session
will introduce SCA and
explain how this open
source implementation of
SCA will simplify the
building of SOA
solutions.
The two most powerful
forces shaping enterprise
software today are
software as a service
(SaaS) and open source
software (OSS).
Previously separate, they
are now converging into a
powerful 'SaaS + OSS'
model destined to become
the dominant business
model for enterprise
software. Using case
studies, the session will
review how vendors can
use this model to scale
rapidly, use capital
efficiently, and acquire
customers for a low
marginal cost. The
presentation will also
address how the model
delivers unprecedented
value to end-customers
through lower total cost
of ownership, higher
quality, faster
deployments, improved
support, enhanced
collaboration, and
greater transparency.
OASIS (Organization for
the Advancement of
Structured Information
Standards, http://www.oas
is-open.org) is a
member-led,
international, non-profit
standards consortium
focused on global
e-business. OASIS drives
the development,
convergence, and adoption
of e-business standards.
It was founded in 1993
and now operates with
over 500 member
organizations and over
5,000 participants in
over 80 countries. There
are over 60 OASIS
Technical Committees
producing royalty-free
and RAND standards. The
open OASIS technical
process is expressly
designed to promote
industry consensus and
unite disparate efforts.
OASIS cooperates with
over 50 other standards
and industry
organizations to reduce
duplication and promote
interoperability for
OASIS Standards. This
presentation will give an
update on the latest
OASIS standards relevant
to the SOA community and
discuss the correlation
between open standards
and open source.
Web 2.0 and Enterprise
2.0 have brought IT
organizations a set of
capabilities to better
meet the demands of
business users. However,
IT needs to be proactive
and build processes to
enable agility and
creativity, and deploy
these assets with
appropriate
enterprise-level control.
What level of
performance, control,
compliance will ensure
team success? And how can
you reduce costs and
development times for
better enterprise value?
Web 2.0 and Enterprise
2.0 have brought IT
organizations a set of
capabilities to better
meet the demands of
business users. However,
IT needs to be proactive
and build processes to
enable agility and
creativity, and deploy
these assets with
appropriate
enterprise-level control.
What level of
performance, control,
compliance will ensure
team success? And how can
you reduce costs and
development times for
better enterprise value?
In keeping with the
longstanding SYS-CON
tradition of being at the
very forefront of
software development with
all its online and
offline resources,
SYS-CON Media & Events
jointly today announced a
double whammy, launching
both 'Open Web
Developer's Journal' (htt
p://openweb.sys-con.com)
and 'Open Web Developer
Summit' (http://openweb.s
ys-con.com) - to be held
for the first time in New
York City April 21-22,
2008.
eRacks Open Source
Systems announced eRacks
Hosting, a new division
that will consolidate its
dedicated hosting and
colocation services. The
eRacks Hosting facilities
occupy racks in multiple
Tier 1 datacenters in
Silicon Valley,
California, where the
Internet backbone and
peering are ranked among
the top in the world.
Spring Source, formerly
known as Interface21, a
provider of open source
software for building and
deploying
mission-critical
enterprise applications,
announced the release of
version 2.5 of the Spring
Framework. With a focus
on delivering enhanced
annotation options, this
latest release completes
Spring 2.0's mission of
providing the most
flexible, most
comprehensive
configuration model for
both Java 1.4 and Java 5.
In another trip down the
rabbit hole to where
things are odd indeed,
SpikeSource, Kim Polese's
open source stack
operation, is going to
certify all of its
SpikeIgnited open source
applications on Windows.
In concert with
Microsoft, it says.
SpikeIgnited includes BI,
ECM, collaboration,
e-mail, CRM and web
content management
software, the kind of
stuff that Microsoft
supplies.
Aug. 5, 2007 09:15 AM Reads: 9,552 Replies: 1
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR RSS FEEDS & GET YOUR SYS-CON NEWS LIVE!
Click to Add our RSS Feeds to the Service of Your Choice: