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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedBEA Rolls Out New Servers with Focus on Java - BEA WebLogic Server 5.1,BEA WebLogic Enterprise 5.1 and BEA WebLogic Express 5.1 Internet/Web server software - Product Announcement
ENT, June 14, 2000 by Jacqueline Emigh
Convinced that Java will overtake Microsoft Corp. solutions in the e-commerce market, BEA Systems Inc. (www.beasys.com) launched a set of Java-based application servers. The products contain new capabilities for business-to-business commerce, including support for wireless mobile devices through the Wireless Markup Language
Version 5.1 of BEA's Web-Logic application server family includes support for XML, Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), and SNMP network administration, and integration with WebGain Studio, a Java-based application developers toolkit from WebGain Inc. (www.webgain.com), an affiliate of BEA. BEA is reselling WebGain Studio, a toolkit that integrates technologies such as WebGain's VisualCafe and StructureBuilder development environments.
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Beyond WebGain, developers can employ toolsets such as VisualAge for Java from IBM Corp. (www.ibm.com) and JProbe Suite from KL Group Inc. (www.klgroup.com) to produce applications for BEA's new WebLogic application servers.
"All of the major application server vendors, with the exception of Microsoft, are moving to Java," says John Kiger, director of product marketing at BEA.
Analysts concur that Java is gaining traction in the application development market. Recent statistics from Gartner-Group Inc. (www.gartner.com) state that 60 percent of all new applications will use Java within the next four years. Gartner also forecasts that Java will be the dominant platform used for processing server-side XML. Another analyst firm, IDC (www.idc.com), has rosier projections for Java. The company predicts the language will surpass Windows in application server market share by 2002.
With an eye toward taking the lead in the Java-based application server market, BEA Systems is forging partnerships with numerous ISVs, application service providers (ASPs), value added resellers, and systems integrators, such as ERP World (www.erpw.com), CIMLINC Inc. (www.cimlinc.com), Blockade Systems Corp. (www.blockade.com), Objectsoft Group Inc. (www.objectsoftgroup.com), and Vitria Technology Inc. (www.vitria.com). Kiger says he hopes one day there will be "a BEA application server in every business."
This may not be far-fetched. The new WebLogic 5.1 lineup supports every conceivable type of business IT need. The system supports development of custom portals, transaction processing, and back-end integration with legacy and third-party applications through XML and BEA's eLink, a family of products that tie BEA's frameworks to back-end applications and networks.
In this latest release, BEA redefined the three members of the WebLogic application server family. BEA's entry-level product, WebLogic Express 5.1 application server, now includes Java Servlet, Java Server Page (JSP), and Java Database Connectivity (JDC) support.
For the middle tier, BEA's WebLogic Server 5.1 supplies the same capabilities as the entry-level product, but also adds support for EJB, Java Messaging Service (JMS), and clusters.
The top-of-the-line WebLogic Enterprise 5.1 adds CORBA, BEA Tuxedo, C, and C support. The new version of the high-end product also includes some features that in the past were only included in the mid-tier server product.
The high-end enterprise edition contains personalization capabilities, page serving, Web-oriented business logic, e-commerce components, and WML and XML support. On the back end, the product provides support for multiple programming models and languages, in addition to enterprise integration through XML messaging and BEA's eLink adapters. PEA previously rolled our an eLink Adaptor Kit (ADK) aimed at letting partners and corporate customers build custom application integration adapters for BEA's e-commenvironment. An eLink Integration Server is also in the works, Kiger adds.
BEA has introduced support for both XML and EIB in the version 2.0 edition of WebLogic Server, a separate "out-of-the-box" product built on WebLogic Server. WebLogic Commerce is targeted at e-commerce operations.
BEA also set its sites on the lucrative business-to-business exchange space, as well. The vendor will use XML, together with Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) services such as EIB 1.1, JSP 1.1, and JDBC 2.0 to integrate WebLogic with its forthcoming E-Collaborate environment for Web-based trading communities and eProcess Integrator workflow engine. BEA's XML capabilities will also support application integration through industrywide standards initiatives such as RosettaNet (www.rosettanet.org) and Microsoft's BizTalk (www.biztalk.org), Kiger says.
BEA also plans to use XML in conjunction with WML to support wireless transaction applications through integration with WAP servers such as those from wireless access vendors, such as Nokia Corp, (www.nokia.com). "Java Server Pages will be used to create on-the-fly HTML or WML pages. The WML pages will be sent across HTTP into a WAP gateway which will convert the pages into a WAP data stream for the mobile applications on the other end," Kiger explains.
This integration is key to developing wireless Web access to corporate data, analysts maintain, Through XMI., application servers will be able to support translation of documents into other formats, as well, ultimately extending past various sorts of mobile devices to speech and Braille, predicts Rita Knox, vice president and research director at GartnerGroup.
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