"... Winston Damarillo, chairman, LogicBlaze. "The integration between LogicBlaze FUSE and eCube Systems NXTware results in a product that builds on the advantages of open source technology, enabling enterprises to easily and costeffectively leverage their legacy host systems in the most flexible and agile SOA solution available today" more ... |
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"... On its own, ECube had begun using some of the Apache software that LogicBlaze incorporated into Fuse, such as the Apache ServiceMix ESB. But what the company really wanted was a complete platform of the sort that Fuse provides. "Fuse really solved the problem of completely integrating all of these open-source capabilities," Peter Marquez said. "From a licensing perspective, it makes a lot of sense for us because we can embed the Fuse technology in our technology." more ... |
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"... Enterprise evolution is an approach designed to give technology managers more flexibility in dealing with legacy assets. By applying evolutionary principles, the value of legacy systems can be maintained and enhanced via functional modernization, which enables more of IT's limited resources to be spent on new capabilities. .." more ...
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"... Market forces drive business requirements, but the limited agility of legacy IT systems restricts the ability of most companies to respond and change ..." more ...
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David Rubinstein, Editor-in-Chief of Software Development Times ....
“Where companies have lost skill sets, the costs to maintain [these systems] are quite high. The technology gets old before the gaps are filled in.” The tools will be Eclipse-based and will provide wizards to help users unfamiliar with the legacy systems to step through the processes quickly, Marquez noted. more ... |
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Peter Marquez, vice president of marketing at eCube Systems LLC in Montgomery, Texas, observes, “Middleware is generally a good thing, but there are gaps and shortcomings in middleware that can make applications brittle.” That becomes particularly true when you try to marry middleware-laden programs with newer ones designed around a service-oriented architecture, he says. To do it right, you need a tool, he claims. more ... |
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