News
DataWatch looks to bring XML to the masses
- By Colleen Frye
- September 4, 2002
DataWatch is betting that small- to medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and departmental groups are
finally ready to tackle XML projects -- and are looking for an
affordable, tactical solution with a clear ROI.
''XML was a smoke-and-mirrors market until recently,'' contends John Kitchen,
DataWatch senior VP of desktop and server solutions. ''Now it's moved beyond the
hype and people are looking for tools. People now have actual projects and need
to generate XML.'' DataWatch hopes organizations will turn to its VorteXML
Designer Version 2, which the company unveiled at the XML Web Services One
Conference last week in Boston.
A desktop product, VorteXML Designer is described as a visual interface for
extracting, transforming and mapping structured text data (including reports,
invoices, log files, HTML and the like) generated from any system into XML.
VorteXML generates the XML using any DTD or XDR schema on an ad-hoc basis,
without requiring any programming.
According to Kitchen, VorteXML Designer leverages the parsing and recognition
technology developed and fine-tuned over the past 10 years for DataWatch's
flagship Monarch data conversion and analytics tool. VorteXML is designed for
the business analyst who can use the tool to convert text to XML rather than
wait for IT. ''It's a more practical solution than teaching a programmer about
a day in the life of a purchasing manager,'' said Ketan C. Patel, XML evangelist
at Lowell, Mass.-based DataWatch. In addition, Kitchen said VorteXML enables
SMBs, many of whom are shut of the B2B supply chains because of the cost and
complexity of EDI systems, to exchange documents with partners ''without
changing their back-end systems.''
Offering customers a practical solution to business problems is DataWatch's business model, which has
served the publicly held company well thus far. Revenues for the fiscal
quarter ended June 30 were $5.17 million, up 21% from the same quarter last
year. And during an economic period where many companies are reporting losses, DataWatch
is profitable and has had three consecutive quarters of profit growth.
And Kitchen believes the company's reputation with Monarch -- used, he
said, by 95% of the Fortune 500 (about 300,000 users in North America) --
will provide an entree for VorteXML. With an established relationship,
''it's not a leap of faith,'' he said. VorteXML Designer runs on Windows
98/ME/2000/NT4/XP and is available now for $599. DataWatch will release a server
version in October that will run on Microsoft Windows 2000/XP. Pricing per
server for single-instance will be $2,999; $7,500 for multi-instance.
About the Author
Colleen Frye is a freelance writer based in Bridgewater, Mass.