Lucas Mearian
Senior Reporter

IBM Rational offers Jazz-enabled project collaboration tools

news
Dec 17, 20083 mins

The software automates work flow by posting real-time project updates and by providing development templates that can be compared with desired business requirements.

IBM’s Rational Software unit announced Wednesday several new applications that provide collaboration, automation, and reporting features that take advantage of Web 2.0 technology.

The new software, enabled by IBM’s Jazz collaboration technology, automates work flow by posting real-time project updates and by providing development templates that can be compared with desired business requirements.

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Scott Hebner, IBM’s vice president for marketing and strategy, said while Rational Software has offered a similar set of technologies for customers developing software in-house, the new tools are intended to strategically manage software assets no matter how they were acquired.

“So the theme of this announcement is to apply these products to align your IT organization with your business priorities to help lower your cost and to help improve the efficiency of all these [software] products,” he said.

IBM’s Telelogic System Architect XT software is aimed at enabling change analysis, allowing business and IT managers to create a transformation plan from how an organization is performing projects to how it would like to perform them. System Architect XT’s Web client includes new templates for capturing business and IT information and creating storyboard-like visuals. New Web-based dashboards also offer business managers insight about IT projects as they are updated.

“So this helps to align business and IT on a common plan on where to invest,” Hebner said.

Rational Requirements Composer software is aimed at building consensus and improving collaboration between business and IT managers in locations around the world by communicating through automated notification tools, such as wikis or instant messaging on a global development basis.

“Let’s say you’re in charge of developing X, Y, Z modules; when you’re done, you check them in, and the business leader sees that,” Hebner said.

Rational RequisitePro software more tightly integrates with IBM Rational Software Architect through Microsoft Word to create requirements definitions. It also incorporates a database infrastructure to facilitate requirements organization, integration, project tracking and analysis.

IBM Rational ClearQuest, Rational Build Forge, Rational Asset Manager, and IBM Rational ClearCase are a collection of applications aimed at improving team productivity and the ability to execute against desired business and technical requirements through new collaboration, automation, and reporting features that also take advantage of Web 2.0 and Jazz technologies.

Melinda-Carol Ballou, an analyst with IDC in Framingham, Mass., said that since 70 to 80 percent of IT project failures relate directly to poor requirements gathering, management and analysis, Rational’s announcements are focused in large part on the coordination of requirements with other key life-cycle areas and pull that area into the Jazz framework.

The latest software tools also dovetail with other announcements made by Rational earlier this year for Rational Team Concert on the software change management side and with quality management last month.

“Rational’s intent is to provide the basis for organizations to collaborate across key life-cycle areas more easily over time via Jazz and to help drive user visibility into metrics such as quality. This announcement also seeks to bring together the Telelogic capabilities as well,” Ballou said. “The challenge for IBM will be in engaging customers to make the transition to Jazz over time, the resonance of this combined life-cycle strategy is part of how they hope to encourage evolution. Yet people change their behavior with reluctance.”

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Lucas Mearian

With a career spanning more than two decades in journalism and technology research, Lucas Mearian is a seasoned writer, editor, and former IDC analyst with deep expertise in enterprise IT, infrastructure systems, and emerging technologies. Currently a senior writer at Computerworld covering AI, the future of work, healthcare IT and financial services IT, his 23-year tenure has included roles such as Senior Technology Editor and Data Storage Channel Editor, where he covered cutting-edge topics like blockchain, 3D printing, sustainable IT, and autonomous vehicles. He has appeared on several podcasts, including Foundry’s Today In Tech. He also served as a research manager at IDC, where he focused on software-defined infrastructure, compute, and storage within the Infrastructure Systems, Platforms, and Technologies group.

Before entering tech media, he served as Editor-in-Chief of the Waltham Daily News Tribune and as a senior reporter for the MetroWest Daily News. He’s won first place awards from the New England Press Association, the American Association of Business Publication Editors, and has been a finalist for several Jesse H. Neal Awards for outstanding business journalism. A former U.S. Marine Corps sergeant who served in reconnaissance, he brings a disciplined, analytical mindset to his work, along with outstanding writing, research, and public speaking skills.

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