17 January 2012

Straight From the Source: How One of Our ISV Partners Uses SaaS to Improve Business

Posted by Matt Cicciari

Matt Cicciari

UnicornHRO_logo

Almost all businesses—large or small—have a need for a comprehensive human resources (HR) program to serve their most valued resources, employees. Leading integrated benefits, payroll and human resources solutions provider Unicorn HRO provides solutions to manage HR processes with greater speed, scope and depth.

In the ’80s, Unicorn’s on-premise solution addressed approximately half the target market needs, and they knew they wanted to offer more.  Today, Unicorn leverages the Progress OpenEdge SaaS application development platform to help their customers, from mega-corporations like McDonalds to lesser-known SMBs (small-medium businesses), do business with greater efficiency.

I asked Tim Diassi, EVP and GM for Unicorn HRO to share the top reasons they use SaaS and this is what he told me:

  • Ability to deliver services via the Web -- Unicorn releases new software upgrades twice a year with updated federal, state and local tax rates. SaaS helps Unicorn keep everything up-to-date so that customers can quickly and easily take advantage of the newest software version to stay compliant.
  • Reduced time-to-market – The scalability and flexibility of a SaaS application development platform accelerates the speed with which Unicorn distributes software upgrades. In fact, Unicorn migrated 50 clients over a single weekend, without a hitch.
  • Business continuity and disaster processing – Just because your network goes down, doesn’t mean your business can stop running. Unicorn’s service teams have kept customers’ applications up and running during all kinds of crises, including Hurricane Katrina.
  • Increased ROI – Thanks to the cloud, Unicorn has experienced double-digit growth for the past 5 years without adding any significant cost of capital investment for the development of new services.

The Progress–Unicorn partnership shows the true power of SaaS. We’re excited to continue to work with such an innovative company as they plan further leverage SaaS for increased efficiency and business process integration.

Thanks and as always, please feel free to drop me a line and let me know what you think.

04 January 2012

Greetings 2012 – Say Hello to OpenEdge 11

Posted by Matt Cicciari

Matt Cicciari

As was mentioned in mid-December, the latest update to our OpenEdge platform is now shipping, and I am pleased to say that it is enabling hundreds of our customers and ISV partners to securely develop and deploy applications across any platform, any mobile device, and any Cloud.

One of the highlights of OpenEdge 11.0 is our patent-pending Multi-tenant Tables, in which data is physically (not virtually) separated in the database - providing greater security and control for Cloud deployments. Multi-tenancy is a critical component and key differentiator for our customers and partners, along with our multi-Cloud deployment options, business process-enabled development, and support for mobile devices.

Feedback has been very positive and many customers are migrating to OpenEdge 11.0 sooner than expected to take advantage of the increased security in the Cloud, greater deployment flexibility, reduced costs, and faster time to market. Let me share some of that feedback with you now.

Security and Flexibility through Multi-Tenancy

Jeffrey Brown, Senior Development Project Manager at Infor notes, “Progress provides us with the technology to power our Infor10 Distribution Business, a distribution application specifically designed to help distributors with complex business models run an efficient, end-to-end operation. We are interested in the new multi-tenancy capabilities in the OpenEdge platform that could provide us with the flexibility to add an additional level of security and separation of data at the database level that is unique in the industry.”

Reducing Cost While Speeding Time to Deployment

Another Progress partner, a global medical software and services provider, used OpenEdge to develop an order management system for internal call centers. Multi-tenant Tables in OpenEdge 11 provide a viable solution for compliance with data security regulations customary to the healthcare industry. Moreover, it facilitates the roll-out of their order management system to all companies they acquire moving forward, which will be deployed in a fraction of the time, for a fraction of the cost, and with better security measures.

Efficiency and Moving Down Market with SaaS

Over in Germany, EDV-Software-Service AG (ESS), a provider of ERP software and services for the mid-size housing and real estate market, is leveraging OpenEdge 11 Multi-tenant tables to move to Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) to gain efficiency and expand into new markets. Their CIO Michael Förster explained, “Progress Software understands the needs of medium-sized businesses and helps us provide value to our customers and accelerate our time-time-market with new solutions. We took part in the OpenEdge Early Adopter Program and Multi-tenancy Workshop, and in only five days were given the tools and expertise needed to get our new release ready for launch in early 2012.”

I look forward to hearing more about how our customers and partners are taking advantage of OpenEdge 11.0. For more information on OpenEdge 11.0, please review the “What’s New in OpenEdge 11.0” feature highlight.

Here’s to a great start to 2012!

Thanks and as always, please feel free to drop me a line and let me know what you think.

21 December 2011

5 Signs You Need a Business Process-Enabled Application

Posted by Matt Cicciari

Matt CicciariAs I have mentioned many times before in various forums, next generation business applications need to be able to quickly adapt to business changes. The old, traditional way of hard-coding workflows is just not acceptable anymore. There is a need to drive continuous change and process improvement even within pre-existing business applications.

But how can you tell whether or not your application is in need of an update? Here are five signs that you need a business process-enabled application:

  1. You have more menu items then puzzle pieces.
    While using an application, users want to seamlessly get through their work with as few detours as possible. Unfortunately some applications make customers feel like they are putting together a puzzle – lots of pieces and no guidance as to where to begin. A business process-enabled application can guide users through the application with a customizable wizard-like interface, creating a much friendlier and better user experience.
  2. Your workflows are set in stone.
    Hard-coding workflows into your application may have worked in the past, but today’s dynamic applications shouldn’t force users to follow a path that might not be correct and/or efficient. Today’s customers demand more flexibility and continuous process improvement, and business process-enabled applications allow you to tailor processes as needed.
  3. Your customers are NOT all created equal.
    Ford used to say you can have your Model T in any color you like, as long as it’s black. Unfortunately, the same goes for many applications these days. A company will tell its customers or users that they can use the application to get the job done as long as they do X then Y then Z. That specific process might not make sense for each customer or user. They want to be able customize the workflow to work best for them, and by providing business process-enabled apps, you can provide the right solution for each specific need all with a single application.
  4. Your IT team makes your business decisions.
    Business decisions should address customer and market demands, not what works best for the IT department. Yet many applications are updated based on what the IT department thinks is best. By adding business process management (BPM) capabilities to your existing application, you can drive better decisions that are acceptable to the business folks, all while adjusting quickly and easily to market changes.
  5. Your application picture is worth a thousand lines of code.
    Many companies will collaborate with their customers or users to determine what processes and workflows should be included in an application and then capture them in some form (e.g. paper, whiteboard, graphical diagramming tool like Microsoft® Visio®). Next, they hand over the results to the developers and tell them to “build the application.” Ultimately, this means the work is done twice as the developers try to figure out how to code what they see. Business process-enabled applications let you quickly capture the process or workflow graphically and simply “plug it in” to the business logic of the application and you are off and running. Think Visio on steroids. That graphical “picture” is now worth much more than the 1000s of “words” or lines of code. It means you only do the work once and also gain better visibility into how the application functions without requiring a master’s degree in computer science. Plus, the business folks can stay engaged.

In summary, if any of these points resonate with you, maybe it's time to think about business process-enabling YOUR business application.

Thanks and, as always, please feel free to drop me a line and let me know what you think.

07 October 2011

Imitation is the Highest Form of Flattery

Posted by Matt Cicciari

Matt CicciariIt’s nice to be first…

First makes you a thought leader. First means you are ahead of the curve. First tells everyone else “follow me…”

On September 20, 2011, Progress announced the general availability of Progress® Arcade™ - a portal environment for simplifying the deployment of SaaS applications in the Cloud. The Arcade platform is Cloud agnostic to prevent vendor lock-in, thanks to a partnership with RightScale. It’s so simple to use, it only takes a handful of mouse clicks to go from zero to the Cloud. You can move your application and data back and forth from the Cloud if you require without restriction. Initially, Amazon is the Cloud vendor for Arcade, with others following soon.

Now, read this:

On October 6, 2011 at Oracle’s OpenWorld Conference, CEO Larry Ellison announced the Oracle Public Cloud, which I happened to learn about from a blog post on TechCrunch. According to Ellison, the Oracle Public Cloud is a platform for the deployment of Oracle applications in the Cloud. It avoids vendor lock-in through Cloud interoperability. It allows the application and data to move back and forth from the Cloud if needed. And, it can “play nice” with Amazon.

Sound familiar? It sure does.

Progress Software was first to market with Arcade. Oracle was first as well – first to follow!

Again, it’s nice to be first…

Thanks and, as always, please feel free to drop me a line and let me know what you think.

13 June 2011

Multi-tenant Distributed Process Environment (Part 2 of 2)

Posted by Ramesh Loganathan

Last week at Chennai, Nasscom EmergeOut conclave recognized the prominence SaaS & Cloud hold in IT psyche today, and they had Innovation in the SaaS/Cloud space as its primary theme. I chaired a session called 'Software Procurement Model Trends'. It was interesting to note the amount of serious adoption in the whole gamut of companies from very small startups thru SMEs to large corporations like Diamler. And while today it is more about Software as a Service (SaaS), companies are now beginning to seriously look at Platform as as Service (PaaS) as well.

I also shared views on  SOA & BPM in the Cloud at the Great Indian Developer Summit in Bangalore last month and geared my thoughts on multi-tenant business processes. Like I had noted in my earlier post, as business processes get more integrated into the enterprise IT infrastructure landscape, new solution architectures are possible. We’ll begin to see whole cloud and distributed application models being encapsulated into single-solutions with embedded business processes. We’ll see these same solutions being deployed on the cloud, and even further being deployed in a dynamically scalable multi-tenant model.

This is, in my view, the more advanced of the three possible models for SOA/BPM in the cloud:

  • Using Business Process Management (BPM) for integrating applications in the cloud
  • Above BPM itself running in the cloud
  • BPM embedded inside solutions running in the cloud (single-solution view)

3 Types of Cloud

BPM in a SaaS model, wherein one can model and execute their business processes over the web, is not exactly new. Gartner reviewed the web based BPM modeling and deployment possibilities in 2008, and cited the three possible deployment models:  For each application instance it may have its own BPMS and repository on a shared server, or a shared  repository, or the extreme form of shared BPMS+repository an a shared server. The whole web based BPM modeling and deployment fad has come and gone. This is partly due to limitations on the kind of use cases that fit in into BPM on the web, with solutions and services they access possibly being within the enterprise. And accessing services inside the enterprise firewall from outside is not the easiest of configurations to open up for secure access. So, model and execute on the web in a SaaS model is probably still time away from mainstream adoption. Until enterprise IT landscapes mature some more; with more widely distributed solutions over the web- possibly accelerated by rapid acceleration of SaaS model business solutions and also the accelerated adoption of public clouds within enterprises.

Now, one possibility not explored much is BPM and SOA becoming an integral part of a single solution. Though SOA is an integration paradigm and BPM is a model-driven business process layer targeting integration solutions & human workflow processes, both do offer a very elegant model for today’s modern applications. The granular coarse-grained services professed by SOA is a very good way of partitioning and abstracting sub-systems in any application. What’s more, BPM is a good mechanism to model all first level business processes and flows in any application. This is the single solution view of SOA/BPM.

However, once we switch to a single-solution view, with SOA/BPM being used in the solution as a first order design paradigm (and not just to integrate external applications or services), SOA/BPM can exist in two forms. 1) A simple solution model with an embedded BPM layer that helps organize the solutions functional sub-components better thru coarse-grained services, and all first level of solution capabilities modeled and realized as BPM processes. 2) A solution model that is actually distributed, but still in a single-solution context enabling and providing functionality for a single business solution. Extending this further, you could look at this single-solution environment as one that actually has distributed functionality (a la normal SOA - even as all the web services are essentially modular functionality that aggregate to form the whole application). These applications will use distributed sub-components in a SOA services abstraction and have business processes that provide a higher level of functionality in the application that access these components. Similar to the single solution view described above, but now these sub-components and business processes also are distributed across servers.

Single Solution View

It is in this single-solution SOA context that SaaS and multi-tenancy become relevant. Using this model, an ISV could build an application on a platform that leverages the modularity offered by SOA abstractions and the easily customizable first level business process flows enabled by BPM. And, they can make this application available in a SaaS model. If there were to be a BPM+SOA based application platform made available by any of the BPM/middleware vendors, then it is only natural to expect this to also support declarative multi-tenancy.

Multi-tenancy enabled BPM/SOA-platform? Does it sound far-fetched? Not really… Last my month my class (Internals of Middleware Systems course at IIIT-H) built a multi-tenant SOA platform as the course project. They demo’d the solution at the end of the course. It had full working declarative multi-tenancy built into the SOA platform they built, and it included a business process (orchestration) engine based on Camel and a web services platform, registry and repository, and declarative multi-tenancy. (Phew! J ). I was pleasantly surprised. They actually got the whole solution working (albeit in a basic POC mode). So technically, a PaaS for Multi-tenant BPM/SOA based applications is definitely feasible. Sometime, hopefully soon, there could be commercial offerings in the market.  

03 March 2011

Multi-tenant Distributed Process Environment

Posted by Ramesh Loganathan

Ramesh LoganathanAs part of the Internals of a Middleware Systems course (one of the two courses I teach at IIIT-Hyderabad), I wanted to dabble in multi-tenant service oriented architecture (SOA) as a course project. About two months back when I first thought of this as the project, I assumed it was going to be an academic exercise where the class would build some interesting multi-tenant SOA platform (building on Camel, CXF on JMS, with a home-grown approach to partitioning the tenant domains for same set of services & processes (camel routes) available in the environment). But as I started getting more into it, I began to realize that there is probably more to it than an academic angle!

We actually started looking at business processes as being a more integral part of an application infrastructure, and not necessarily just part of the integration layer. Our thought process even brought us above and beyond our recently introduced OpenEdge BPM solution that enables our Application Partners to have key parts of their business logic defined as BPM processes, thereby allowing easier customizations for unique business flows and requirements. (Many years back had proposed embedded buziness preocesses (in Java applications) as a theoretical possibility in application architectures. At that time didnt realise there will actually be a simple platforms that brings both BPM & application logic together as well as our OE-BPM now does). With BPM and application logic now part of an integrated platform, it is only question of time before this architecture extends to a more distributed deployments with application logic composed as distributed services that is then orchestrated in the BPM layer to enable first level business capabilities and flows. Thus bringing in SOA also into the mix. And the moment this solution goes on the cloud in a SaaS model, the whole platform- Application logic, SOA & BPM- will now need to be multi-tenant capable.

Most of multi-tenant SOA seemed common sense.Still, when I was trying to find some academic basis, I came across this comprehensive overview in an IEEE article, Multi-tenant SOA Middleware for Cloud Computing. This article summarizes the various aspects of multi-tenancies - from the well known models for database centric solutions to enabling multi-tenancies (one DB per tenant, one schema per tenant or the more advanced tenants across multiple schema's (each shared)), to the more complex problem of actual application multi-tenancy. The application multi-tenancy also had a sound approach presented in this paper - Architecture Strategies for Catching the Long Tail - where they present a few levels, from the basic custom instance per tenant, to the next level where it is still one instance per tenant but the application is architected for easy configurabation. This paper further presents the next level where there is a shared instance that can service multiple tenants, to the most advanced level that it is a shared instance across tenants that can also be clustered & made highly-available. All great stuff. But what does this mean for SOA and BPM environments?

The more fundamental question that begs to be answered is what is the play for SOA in the cloud? Is there a SaaS play at all involving SOA? In the past few years that I've been dabbling in cloud  computing and talking about cloud environments at seminars here in India,  I never really thought SOA had a major angle. But surely in today's enterprise IT landscape, any enterprise integration solution will need to also access solutions in the cloud either by running a SaaS platform, custom built on a PaaS platform, or in a cloud-based virtual infrastructure platform. As SOA adoption matures, the other aspect that is rapidly emerging is a new class of business applications that use business process management (BPM) and service abstractions as a more integral part of solutions. All the simplicity, rapid development, composability and maintainability value that SOA offered for enterprise integration (in terms of atomic coarse grained business functions and processes that are composed off of these services, and that are easy to define and modify), now makes sense even for individual applications. Who would say NO to applications that are easy to build and maintain?

Given this, the use cases emerging for BPM solutions are now very different. And once BPM and SOA get into the application architecture, the need for (and value from) the cloud and multi-tenancy is immediate. We've seen the SaaS model get serious traction from ISV's because it delivers flexibility as well as a low-cost & ease of ownership. Once we go the full hog, then why just business processes? The applications can also have first level business services (aka SOA services) that can be composed into next level business processes and business workflows. A full-fledged SOA platform now forming the basis for applications.

So, in order to multi-tenant enable these BPM + SOA solutions, what are the challenges? ...Stay tuned.

23 February 2011

Belgacom and the Case for Business-oriented integration in Communications Providers

Posted by John Bates

It is no secret that the telecommunications industry has been exploring various ways to tackle issues such as declining ARPU (average revenue per user) and increasing customer churn over the last five years. The keys to proactively addressing these issues are agility and responsiveness. For example, responsiveness around customer service – to make customers feel they have a personalized valuable service – which reduces churn; and agility -- around launching new and compelling services rapidly – to increase ARPU.

Despite this quest for the Holy Grail, many communications providers have failed to lay sufficient foundations. While there may be some useful technologies deployed in an attempt to provide an agile and responsive integration platform – these technologies have often failed to deliver what is needed by the business. SOA is a prime case in point. While SOA technology has been successful in many ways, it has also led to a lot of disappointments. Often the business was sold on the promise that SOA would make operations more agile and responsive.  However, what resulted was technology for technologists that looked like plumbing and was daunting and too generic to the business.

Business people want solutions that can deliver visibility to problems and opportunities – such as key business events (e.g., an opportunity to sell a new service, based on context or location) or process failures (e.g. persistent dropped calls for an important customer) – so that problems can be responded to quickly and opportunities taken. The business also wants solutions that can enforce business-level policies and service-level agreements, as well as solutions that can interconnect services at a “semantic level” – not just plumb data together. In other words – the business wants to deal in business-level concepts, and be assured that the underlying complexity will be managed by the system.

Today’s announcement that Belgium operator Belgacom is transforming its business and IT integration programme (more information here) represents a huge step forward for the telecommunications industry. Belgacom is clearly focused around being more responsive to the needs of their customers in order to tackle issues such as churn through improved integration. By selecting the right business integration foundation to support their IT strategy, Belgacom has taken a critical step forward in a long-term strategy to become more operationally responsive to their customers.

Due to the nature of the economic times we live in, it is vital that the telecommunications industry as a whole ensures that they have the best possible integration technology in place. Only then will operators be able to enhance their customer experience management offerings to attract and retain their business customers, differentiate their offerings, and lower their service costs.

 

21 January 2011

Sharing some winter sun with Progress' application partners

Posted by Giles Nelson

Giles NelsonEarlier this week I participated in the 2011 Progress Global Partner Conference which was held in Florida.

This is only the second time the partner conference has been global – previously it was held regionally – and I’m delighted to say that hundreds of representatives from business partners attended from all over the world.

Most of the partners present were what Progress terms application partners – those that have used Progress products to build applications that are then sold to end-users. As always, the sheer diversity of the applications partners create and sell is mind-boggling – from healthcare apps specialising in kidney treatment to point-of-sale retail systems deployed in 25,000 outlets worldwide to location-based content delivery platforms. Progress recognises the many varied achievements of its partners with its very own awards ceremony. The winners can be found here. And, yes, it is a tiny bit like the Golden Globes, although without the acerbic wit of Ricky Gervais.

These partners continue to be incredibly important to Progress Software. Supporting them with product innovation as well as facilitating new ways for them to deploy their applications (for example by testing out their applications in the cloud with Progress Arcade) is a key pillar of Progress’ strategy. Another strategic pillar is Responsive Process Management (RPM), launched by Progress to the market in 2010, and several sessions in the conference were dedicated to explaining how RPM fitted into the partners’ world. Adoption of RPM in the partner community is happening. An example of this is Skyward, school management software supplier, recently announcing their use of Progress’ OpenEdge BPM platform. This puts them on the first step to full RPM adoption.

John Rymer from Forrester Research, the software analysts, also addressed the conference. Amongst other topics, he talked about four big “on-ramps” of new functionality – business process management, analytics, business events, and collaboration. These, he believed, were the most effective ways for software vendors (Progress’ partners in this case) to deliver new functionality fast and will be the key technologies behind many of the next generation software platforms. Forrester’s presence at a Progress partner conference was timely. Recently one of their analysts, Mike Gaultieri, blogged about Java, despite being more popular than ever, being a “dead end” for enterprise application development. He encouraged developers to consider alternatives, including Progress OpenEdge, that offer substantially higher productivity. It was a reminder that OpenEdge remains as relevant as ever and is a great aid in application modernization. Further output on this topic from Forrester is imminent.

All in all, it was a successful, high-energy conference. Many thanks to all the partners who came, and to those that didn’t, please try and make it in 2012!

 

 

05 October 2010

Are you a sitting duck or one that will respond immediately to threats?

Posted by Giles Nelson

Giles NelsonWhile many organisations are being ‘cautiously optimistic’ about what the future holds, the realities of today’s tough business environment could leave them as sitting ducks, according to Rick Reidy, CEO at Progress Software. They might take consolation that they’re in the same pond, but when interest rates in Japan hit near-zero, banks continue to fail and mistakes can lead to a ‘flash crash’, the pond is not a safe place to be. Businesses may have money, but fear and uncertainty is holding back decision-making – we await further regulation and want to know the consequences of recent government changes.

 
Listening to Rick’s keynote at our UK business summit (#progresswsummit, if you want to follow on twitter), in the impressive surrounding of Chelsea Football Club’s ground, London, it seems most of the audience agrees – it’s not good enough to sit around and wait to see if growth returns, and you cannot grow simply by cutting costs. You have to take control of your own ‘growth agenda’, as Rick put it. Businesses that want to survive the next five years need better visibility, through putting processes in place that enable them to react quickly to meet customer demands, adapt to market changes and take advantage of new opportunities. As Rick has advised, businesses need to act on up to the minute information so that leaders can make decisions based on foresight, not hindsight.
 
If you’re a regular reader of this blog you’ll already know that we call this ‘operational responsiveness’: the ability to sense and respond to customer and market changes so that organisations can move quickly to meet challenges and take advantage of new opportunities. 
 
Rick has talked about what this means in the airline industry: the notion of irregular operations has become a weekly reality as companies face intense market pressure, striking staff and disruption from natural phenomenon. ‘Swivel chair’ communication between operational areas is no longer good enough. To react quickly enough, they need responsive processes in place that can help them maintain services and inform customers, almost as-it-happens. If they don’t, they will face massive fines, lost custom and damaged reputation – risks no company can afford at present.
 
We’ll be hearing more from Gordon Penfold, CTO at British Airways, about their approach to becoming operationally responsive to meet the challenges of today and tomorrow. Watch this space for my take on his talk…

 

17 September 2010

The Seven Points of an ESB

Posted by Jonathan Daly

When discussing an ESB, many people keep it simple, sticking to the generalities of SOA and sharing services to build composite business applications.  Certainly, these are incredibly important benefits of an ESB but what do these dicussions really mean at the architecture level? 

Another word for integration when it comes to ESBs is mediation.  After all, that is truly what an ESB does - mediates the differences between application components (services) that were not intended to work together.  So then, in context of mediation, how should an ESB be examined?  Here at Progress, we view there to be seven points of mediation that serve as a set of key principles that apply to any integration infrastructure. They are critical because adherence to all seven is necessary to achieve the ultimate goals of SOA: reuse and agility.

Any one point that is not mediated becomes a point of brittleness. Put another way, interoperability needs to be tested along seven key points, which, briefly, are:

7 POINTS OF MEDIATION
Transport/Protocol
Location/Destination
Semantic/Format
Sequencing
Error Recovery
Quality of Service/Quality of Protection
Interaction Model

To help examine these points in-depth Progress has created a series of technical briefs (white papers).  These papers use the 'Seven Points of Mediation' as a way of describing how an ESB is, in fact, a comprehensive infrastructure onto which services can delegate these points. The overriding idea is that if a service delegates each and every point of mediation, it becomes more reusable in more contexts. These papers explain how Sonic ESB enables a service to free itself of these considerations, ultimately, so that it can provide the agility that SOA promises.

Be sure to watch the Transport, Location, and Semantics podcast and download the technical brief to learn more about the Seven Points of Mediation and the importance of each in relation to supporting a truly agile and responsive business application infrastructure.


Check out all of the Enterprise Integration Whiteboard Series white papers and videos here!

17 August 2010

Dynamic Routing Architecture - Strength Comes from the Core

Posted by Jonathan Daly

This week's deep dive into the gears of Enterprise Integration take us to the Dynamic Routing Architecture or DRA.  SonicMQ's Dynamic Routing Architecture (DRA) technology allows the delivery of messages between applications regardless of the cluster that the application is connected to. In case of a connection failure, (e.g. between regional offices), DRA will route messages via alternative operational paths, and facilitate expansion without incurring significant administrative overhead. Clusters may connect to other clusters as needed, creating highly distributed deployments across loosely-coupled locations.

As mentioned in the first series brief, “Messaging Architecture,” every Sonic broker has a set of acceptors that define it’s connectivity to the rest of your messaging architecture. These can play three roles: as a client link, as an inter-broker link (in a cluster) and as a DRA link enabling two clusters to communicate across a WAN. In addition, because Sonic acceptors can handle multiple protocols, the DRA link can work over other various types of connections as well.

But, DRA goes beyond the Sonic clustering architecture. It optimizes communications in many complex, distributed topologies while providing administrative transparency, or single-entry administration. As a result, DRA enables easier scaling and greater agility in changing the IT environment to meet changing business needs and market
conditions.

Be sure to watch the DRA video podcast and download the technical brief to learn more about how DRA provides unmatched high-availability and delivers transparency and administrative efficiencies that truly ripple to both the bottom and top-line of business activity.


The forth brief and whiteboard video in the Enterprise Integration Whiteboard Series, Dynamic Routing Architecture,  explains how the Progress enterprise integration solutions work. This brief focuses on the Progress® Sonic® Dynamic Routing Architecture® (DRA), its purpose and capabilities over and above the Sonic clustering architecture as well as some special use cases..

Join Us At Progress Exchange 2010

Posted by The Progress Guys

Progress Exchange Online Conference is coming to a computer near you, September 14 – 16, 2010. This free virtual forum is the place for sharing ideas, tips and best practices on how to benefit fully from Progress OpenEdge in the cloud. You’ll be joined by OpenEdge users from around the world to explore hot topics like:

  • Modernizing OpenEdge applications using GUI for .Net
  • Combining Microsoft Silverlight and Progress OpenEdge
  • Leveraging the latest and greatest of OpenEdge Architect
  • Previewing OpenEdge 11 and the NEW multi-tenant database
  • Enhancing OpenEdge performance
  • Deploying OpenEdge in the Cloud
  • Understanding how Savvion (BPM) and OpenEdge can work together

Register now and get ready to choose from over 36 interactive sessions in 6 tracks, including:

  • Integration and Process Management
  • Best Practices and Application Modernization
  • Developer Tools & Productivity
  • Operational Efficiency
  • Software as a Service/Cloud Computing
  • UI Flexibility

If you register before August 30th, you’ll be entered to win an Apple iPad. For more information and to register, please visit www.progress.com/exchange2010.

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