Eric Knorr
Contributing writer

Oracle’s Project X revealed

news
Apr 16, 20073 mins

A new Application Integration Architecture coupled with process integration packs promise a new class of tailored composite application

Like the mainframe, ERP (enterprise resource planning) software soldiers on, though companies complain bitterly about its inflexibility. Oracle just took a significant step toward softening that rigidity with its new Application Integration Architecture (AIA), announced by Oracle president Chuck Phillips at the company’s Collaborate ‘07 User Group Conference.

AIA is a framework in which the functionality of Oracle’s vast application portfolio — Oracle E-Business, PeopleSoft, Siebel, and JD Edwards — can be recombined and tailored to enterprise needs. To jumpstart this, and deliver business process expertise, the company is creating Process Integration Packs (PIPs), which are pre-built workflows that embody horizontal or vertical sets of business processes. The first two, available now, integrate Siebel CRM with the Oracle E-Business Suite.

Oracle vice president of development and strategy Jose Lazares described AIA as “an open standards-based platform that we expect to be leveraged by Oracle, our partners, and our customers to deliver best practices and industry-specific, cross-application business processes.” The PIPs draw on the functionality of Oracle’s Fusion middleware and are “prepackaged and delivered as products that can be sustained and delivered over time.” According to Lazares, the first PIP verticals will be telecommunications, resale, financial services, consumer packaged goods, and high-tech manufacturing.

Anne Thomas Manes, an analyst at Burton Group, characterized Oracle’s AIA as “brilliant.” Oracle has “done a beautiful job of service-oriented design. They’ve defined a set of XML vocabularies that their applications can now share.” She noted that, with Oracle’s multiple acquisitions, AIA has solved a problem faced by many large enterprises: creating arrays of interoperable services in a diverse application environment.

The announcement appears to target hardcore Oracle shops that already license multiple Oracle applications — and have the stomach for multiple PIP licenses as well. But the potential for greater flexibility is there, because both the PIPs and the Oracle applications interoperate using standards that are application-independent. Ultimately, Oracle wants to create an ecosystem of third parties that can license their solutions in the AIA mix.

“Any application within our portfolio and/or third party application can be plugged in, as long as they map to the common object model and service definition,” said Lazares. “Ultimately, system integrators, ISVs, and can actually start to build out capabilities beyond just the context of Oracle applications.” The BPM tools included with Oracle’s Fusion middleware offering can be used by customers that want to create new processes or connect to third party applications. To do so, however, they will need a full license for Oracle’s SOA Suite.

Eric Knorr

Eric Knorr is a freelance writer, editor, and content strategist. Previously he was the Editor in Chief of Foundry’s enterprise websites: CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network World. A technology journalist since the start of the PC era, he has developed content to serve the needs of IT professionals since the turn of the 21st century. He is the former Editor of PC World magazine, the creator of the best-selling The PC Bible, a founding editor of CNET, and the author of hundreds of articles to inform and support IT leaders and those who build, evaluate, and sustain technology for business. Eric has received Neal, ASBPE, and Computer Press Awards for journalistic excellence. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin, Madison with a BA in English.

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