Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
1/2/2008
WaveMaker Software unveiled two new developer solutions this week: WaveMaker Visual Assembly Studio and WaveMaker Rapid Deployment Framework for Enterprise Web 2.0. The former is designed to provide enterprise departmental developers with a visual dev tool for building data-driven Web apps. The latter enables those apps to be deployed to industry-standard Java app servers.
WaveMaker is the new incarnation of ActiveGrid, a three-year-old company originally focused on assembling an open source deployment stack based on LAMP, as well as inexpensive and simple-to-use application runtimes, according to Todd Hay, WaveMaker's VP of sales and marketing. The company changed its focus--and its name--in November.
"We found, over time, that some of the technology choices we had made were not passing the grade with CIOs for deployment inside an enterprise," Hay said.
In 2006, the company began refocusing on what it perceived as a gap within the enterprise between the business developers, who are trying to build everyday productivity apps, and the CIOs, who need a standards-based architecture that they can manage and control.
One of Hay's customers put it to him this way: Central IT is focused on big, bet-the-business infrastructure projects that are going to solve all of the company's problems, take years of work, and never get finished. Meanwhile, the business teams are building temporary apps they plan to stand up for a few months just to get through one project, and they end up living forever.
"We could see that the business groups were increasingly frustrated over the inability of IT to deliver the applications they needed, when they needed them, and increasingly turning to tools that the CIO couldn't manage--things like Microsoft Access, Oracle Forms and Lotus Notes," added Rick Saletta, WaveMaker's director of marketing and product management. "So you get more and more of this rogue IT being developed."
In helping CIOs "stop the bleeding" caused by what the company believes are thousands of these guerilla or shadow applications, WaveMaker found a new focus, and two guiding concepts: "Web Fast" and "CIO Safe."
Billed as "PowerBuilder for the Web," WaveMaker's Visual Assembly Studio (VAS) is a Web-based AJAX and Web development suite. The "Web Fast" toolset is designed for drag-and-drop assembly of Web apps using AJAX widgets, Web services and databases. The company claims that VAS accelerates app development by as much as 67 percent and reduces the lines of code written by 98 percent, when compared with applications built on Microsoft .NET. VAS is based on software acquired by ActiveGrid when it purchased the TurboAjax Group in September.
"We make that comparison because PowerBuilder solved this problem in the '90s," observed Hay, "when the trend was toward client-server. Nothing has come along since then for Web developers."
"No one is empowering those visual developers from the client-server days with a tool that allows them to get their application up on the Web," added Saletta. "And no one is bridging that gap and addressing the needs of the CIOs. There simply has been no alternative to the rogue IT."
The "CIO Safe" piece comes with the deployment platform. Web applications built with VAS can then be deployed with the Rapid Deployment Framework onto Java applications servers that are already part of the CIO's approved infrastructure, Saletta said, including Apache Tomcat and J2EE servers from IBM, BEA, Sun and Red Hat.
WaveMaker Visual Assembly Studio 3.0 is available now as a free download from the company's Web site. WaveMaker Rapid Deployment Framework 3.0 is available under commercial license.
John K. Waters is a freelance journalist and author based in Palo Alto, CA.
copy text (above) for proper citation
In May in San Francisco, experts from leading universities, libraries, and research institutions around the world met as part of an ongoing effort to address a pressing issue: archiving the world's history, right up to today.
The Quilt, a coalition of 28 regional network organizations, has added XO Communications Services to its authorized vendor list. The Quilt represents 200 universities and thousands of other educational institutions across the United States. With this new relationship, Quilt members can purchase XO's high-speed IP transit and network transport services at competitive rates.
At the NECC 2008 conference in Texas this week, Wimba launched a new version of Wimba Classroom, the virtual classroom component of the company's Collaboration Suite. The new 5.2 release expands options for classroom capture and adds a variety of other functional and ease of use features.
The lure of automating workflow online so human intervention is minimized is continually reinforced in the minds of higher education administrators by examples of automated campus systems such as financials, student information systems, and other enterprise systems. But what's good for management is not always good for learning.
Cognos, which IBM acquired in January, has released an update to its business intelligence software that will run on the Linux operating system on IBM System z mainframes. IBM Cognos 8 BI was being developed by the two companies prior to the acquisition, but assimilation of Cognos into IBM accelerated development.
Facebook is a way to greet a colleague as if she or he is on your own campus: a wave at a distance, a hello at the corner burrito place, a honk as you both leave the campus parking lot. Informal collegiality has been extended over the miles.