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IBM execs cite need to unify business goals, app dev

Rational conference opens

By Paul Krill
May 23, 2005
 

Las Vegas – At the IBM Rational Software Development Conference 2005 here on Monday, IBM executives cited the unification of business needs and software development as critical for enterprises.

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The officials emphasized a team-based, process-oriented strategy for development.

“Better software translates into better business,” said Roger Oberg, marketing vice president of Rational Software within the IBM Software Group, as he opened the morning’s keynotes. Building better software requires participation of architects, business analysts, developers, testers, release managers, and others, Oberg said.

Today’s reality, in which ROI is vital, dictates that better alignment is needed between software and business, said Daniel Sabbah, general manager at IBM Rational. “Our task is to evolve patterns of success in software engineering,” Sabbah said.

An attendee said he agreed that business processes and software development need to be unified.

“That’s the only way that business knows what they need and what they’re going to get,” said attendee John Garis, Process Architect for Information Technology at The Hartford insurance company. He emphasized that he was not speaking on behalf of his employer.

The disconnect between users and software development has led to finger-pointing, according to Sabbah.

“We tend to treat operations as a wall over which we throw development operations and assets when we as developers are finished with them. We then argue incessantly over whose fault it is when they don’t work or don’t scale,” Sabbah said.

To help unify development with business needs, IBM is announcing a set of services that integrate the business view into the software lifecycle using Rational Unified Process templates and best practices, Sabbah said.

Specifically, the company unveiled software that automatically identifies and repairs problems in business applications to enable them to be fixed in minutes and hours rather than days or weeks, according to IBM. Offerings blend middleware from the Rational development and testing tools platform with Tivoli application management software.

Products being announced included IBM Problem Resolution Toolkit for Rational Application Developer and IBM Performance Optimization Toolkit for Rational Performance Tester. These are intended to enable a faster, automated process for problem identification in business applications. The packages will particularly benefit companies building an SOA, IBM said.

The tools gain troubleshooting capabilities from Tivoli’s Monitoring for Transaction Performance software for diagnosing and fixing transaction performance problems. The Tivoli software monitors application performance and quality while the application is live.

Service offerings also were unveiled, including IBM Standard Deployment Service for Rational Portfolio Manager, IBM Fast Track Deployment Service for Rational Portfolio Manager, and IBM Rational Project/Program Management Assessment Service. Rational Portfolio Manager provides business and development teams with a set of capabilities for planning and managing IT projects.

IBM Software Release and Deployment Service, meanwhile, helps users to more effectively use Rational ClearCase and ClearQuest with Tivoli Configuration Manager.

Also unveiled were new capabilities for software quality tools. Rational Performance Tester is being fitted with functionality to improve ease of use and accuracy of application testing. New HTML rendering capabilities let users view Web pages being tested, instead of just the code.

The IBM Rational Functional Tester Extension for Siebel Test Automation will enable customers deploying Siebel 7.7 applications to verify that their Siebel applications will function as intended. Another tool, Rational Performance Tester Extension for Siebel Test Automation, provides load testing capabilities for Siebel 7.7 applications. The two Siebel-related offerings ship within 60 days, with pricing to be announced when the products are available.

To enable development of application services, IBM is focusing on enabling services definitions to be captured as XML documents, which describe the services independent of implementations. The idea is to represent abstraction and modularity as XML documents that can be passed around networks.

IBM also is announcing resources for implementing SOAs as part of its developerWorks program. A Rational Unified Process plug-in for business modeling aligns with a plug-in for SOA and two UML profiles for modeling and representing software services, Sabbah said.

Also at the conference:

- IBM is supporting development of services to make it easier to do geographically distributed development, via the company’s ClearQuest change-tracking system, according to the company.

- IBM said it plans to integrate Lotus capabilities for building collaboration and community into its software development offerings.

- Sabbah said IBM has demonstrated but is not ready to announce its SOA Workbench package, which focuses on establishing services and connecting them to existing deployments.

- Sabbah expressed doubts about Microsoft’s ability to meet enterprise needs with the upcoming Visual Studio 2005 platform, which is to feature team-based development. “I still don’t believe they understand core elements of what it means to deal with enterprises,” Sabbah said. Microsoft is still too focused on its own platform, he added.

- Sabbah said that the notion of composite applications still is a vision, but one that would change the shape of the application industry.

- Sabbah said the popular open source LAMP (Linux Apache MySQL Perl/Python/PHP) stack is fine for basic applications but will not accommodate growth. “The types of businesses being created around those particular models [such as LAMP] are essentially going to have to grow up at some point,” he said. But the company will support PHP (Hypertext Preprocessor). “I expect you will see more rather than less in the evolution of PHP development tools across all of our different platforms, which will involve Rational,” Sabbah said.

- IBM wants to ensure that it includes multiple platforms in its development tools efforts, including Microsoft .Net. Additionally, team-based development capabilities will be expanded.

- Retiring Rational co-founder Mike Devlin was saluted at the event and spoke briefly onstage. “We basically started with the idea that every high-growth sector of the economy would depend on software,” he said.





 


 
Paul Krill is an InfoWorld editor at large.
 

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