IBM has agreed to acquire privately held
Webify for an undisclosed sum.
Webify delivers industry specific building blocks for creating Service
Oriented Architectures (SOAs) in healthcare and insurance sectors. Its pre-build
service components allow enterprises to more quickly create business services.
"[Webify] brings these assets that are very much industry specific assets and
that add value to an industry as they start to build these next generation
composite applications, and as they start to deal with their industry standards
that are making up their industries," IBM's general manager of WebSphere Robert
LeBlanc said in a conference call.
Healthcare in the US for instance has to comply with the
HIPAA legislation and insurance
providers have to meet regulations set by
ACORD.
SOA is an architecture to build and maintain applications in an enterprise.
Rather than designing applications from the ground up, SOA allows developers to
reuse code between departments and combine resources from all over the company.
Using XML and standards from the world of web services, SOA will support both
Java and .Net, as well as any of the standards-based integration platforms from
companies like Oracle and SAP.
The Webify products will be integrated into IBM's Webshpere portfolio of
webservices and SOA products.
In addition to the industry specific SOA building blocks, Webify will supply
IBM with a governance manager that allows SOAs to meet regulatory requirements.
Webify is a long time partner of IBM. The company also has partnerships with
Oracle and BEA. Webify chief executive Manoj Saxena said that the company will
continue supporting customers on non-IBM platforms.
The emergence of industry specific applications signals a level of maturatio
n for SOA products, said Jason Bloomberg, senior analyst with Zapthink. He added
however that there remain to be some gaps in IBM's SOA product offering.
He also cautioned that the acquisition will put IBM in more direct
competition with some enterprise application vendors that are long-time partners
such as SAP and Oracle.
"IBM has steered clear of that because they have so many partners in the
business application space," Bloomberg told vnunet.com.
"As we are seeing less of these Chinese walls between business applications
and middleware, it becomes harder for IBM to partner with folks like SAP and
Oracle."
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