Free Newsletters
InfoWorld Daily

InfoWorld
Log-in | Register

BEA's Genesis to back open source, scripting languages

Details of next-generation apps platform fleshed out by executives


BEA Systems' planned next-generation application platform, called Project Genesis, will feature an open source component and accommodate scripting languages such as Ruby and Perl, BEA officials said at the BEAWorld San Francisco conference on Tuesday.

Open source has been great for proliferating knowledge in the marketplace, said Alfred Chuang, BEA chairman, CEO, and president. In addition, he mentioned that development technologies will be open-sourced as part of Genesis and that BEA already offers open source technologies to the Eclipse Foundation. "We also believe that we likely have to be grooming and starting up a new community," he said.

Genesis is intended to enable quick development of applications without requiring new infrastructure. It will feature tools that take collaboration, social tagging, and business process management and integrate them with existing enterprise applications. New sets of applications can be built, including mashups and composite applications as well as business processes. Wikis, blogs, and RSS feeds also are to be part of Genesis, said Rob Levy, CTO at BEA. The company announced Project Genesis earlier on Tuesday.

Chuang, however, cautioned against going open source for the sake of going open source.

"I think open source for open source's sake has been useless," Chuang said.

"Some companies have taken multimillion lines of operating system code and open-sourced it," he said, critically. Although sometime-BEA rival Sun Microsystems did this with its Solaris OS, Chuang said his comment was not specifically targeted at Sun. Others have done this as well, he said.

Genesis will support Java code as well as scripting languages, Chuang said. He cited scripting languages as an area where BEA historically has not had much involvement.

A specific product plan for Genesis is set to be unveiled at the BEAWorld Shanghai conference in December. BEA officials stressed some components of Genesis, such as BEA's enterprise service bus technology, already exist. New products are to include a rules engine technology, as well as offerings for data manipulation and structured mapping.

"Genesis is sort of where ultimately we want to take AquaLogic for this new generation of applications," Chuang said. AquaLogic is a BEA middleware platform.

Genesis will support SaaS (software as a service) methodologies in that ISVs could use Genesis to build applications, which they could then offer via a SaaS format, Levy said.

Also, Chuang stressed that BEA has no plans to get into the applications business. While the lines are being blurred by foundational technologies for building applications, BEA is not going to provide any vertical expertise in applications, he said.

Paul Krill is editor at large at InfoWorld.

Talkback:

commentPost a Comment

 

MOST COMMENTS

 
 





COMPREHENSIVE DATA PROTECTION AND DISASTER RECOVERY
Traditional backup and recovery is becoming irrelevant. You need more. Watch this InfoWorld and Dell Equallogic webcast to learn the current trends in Comprehensive Data Protection and Disaster Recovery for VMware Virtual Infrastructure. Sponsored by Dell Equallogic:

»  Click here to view this Webcast
  Enterprise Data Security Solutions Guide
Data security used to be about outside threats. These days the biggest challenge for data-driven organizations is the management of secure information from the inside out. Data is available on laptops, your network and even USB devices, but not always secure. Read this Solutions Guide to learn the best ways to keep it safe. Sponsored by ISC2

»  Click here to download now

- Special Advertising Partners -
WHITE PAPERS
 

» Technology White Papers Library

Technology White Papers by Topic

Technology White Papers E-mail Alert

Find out when the latest white paper is available:
 
 
INFOWORLD MARKETPLACE
 
» BUY A LINK NOW
 
 

Video

 
 
 

Podcasts

 
IFW Daily 12/04/2008

Sun enters RIA realm with JavaFX, Adobe says it will cut 600 jobs, AMD...

 
 
 

Columnists

 
 
 

Resource Center


Ads by techwords beta  [See your link here]
 




Sponsored Technology Links

 
 
 HOME  NEWS  BLOGS  PODCASTS  VIDEOS  TECHNOLOGIES  TEST CENTER  EVENTS   About | Advertise | Awards | RSS | Contact Us 

Copyright © 2008, Reprints, Permissions, Licensing, IDG Network, Privacy Policy, Terms of Service.
All Rights reserved. InfoWorld is a leading publisher of technology information and product reviews on topics including viruses,
phishing, worms, firewalls, security, servers, storage, networking, wireless, databases, and web services.

CIO :: ComputerWorld :: CSO :: Demo :: GamePro :: Games.net :: IDG Connect :: IDG World Expo
Industry Standard :: IT World :: JavaWorld :: LinuxWorld :: MacUser :: Macworld :: Network World :: PC World :: Playlist
TecChannel :: TecCommunity