News
Tool cuts 'last mile' Web services costs
- By Rich Seeley
- September 18, 2002
Seeking to bring Web services integration to 'last-mile' desktop applications
such as expense reporting, Boston-based Nobilis Software Inc. has unveiled
Nobilis Ci, described as a low-cost process manager for Microsoft Office
applications.
Nobilis defines last-mile developments as those where corporations are not
willing to invest in large-scale development projects even though the end
result, such as Web services-based expense reporting, would be desirable.
'Last-mile applications are things that people say 'I'm not going to spend
$100,000 on these,'' said Michael Clifton, Nobilis COO.
With the release of a desktop tool costing less than $400, Clifton said
Nobilis believes IT departments will be able to fit last-mile projects into
their tight IT budgets.
David Sweeney, client services manager at IntrinsiQ Data Corp., a healthcare
information provider in Waltham, Mass., is quoted in the Nobilis Ci announcement
as saying that his organization is 'not prepared to spend the money on an
application like Siebel for our CRM system'; instead, they are taking the
Nobilis desktop integration approach.
Nobilis Ci is a scaled-down version of the Nobilis Enterprise Server, said
Dave Meiselman, director of Internet strategy at Nobilis.
'What we've done with Nobilis Ci is take the platform we developed for
Nobilis Enterprise and shrink it down to a point where it's installable and
usable on a desktop for a business manager or IT manager,' he explained. 'Rather
than install the service on WebSphere or WebLogic, what we've done is taken an
embedded open-source app server and scaled it down to 10 out-of-the-box rules
components. A business manager or IT manager can install Nobilis Ci on their
desktop and can be running fully contained and fully supported processes
directly from that desktop.'
An IT manager or business manager could use Nobilis Ci to create an expense
reporting application for end users by linking Microsoft Excel to Web services
available from the corporate mainframe financials system, added Clifton.
In the scenario he envisions, an IT department would use the Nobilis
Enterprise platform to build a 'sandbox' of components and Web services that the
business user would then employ to create an expense reporting or budget
tracking application running in Excel.
For more information, click on http://www.nobilis.com
About the Author
Rich Seeley is Web Editor for Campus Technology.