Web 2.0 technologies are to get some enterprise underpinning with a suite of
products from BEA Systems. The BEA move highlights the way businesses are
turning to the consumer web to revamp the way applications are used, and to
attract new talent to the workplace.
The middleware giant’s
AquaLogic
Pages, AquaLogic Ensemble and AquaLogic Pathways are intended to give firms
the usability and interactivity of social software without loss of
administrative control. The releases support mashups, widgets, user-generated
web applications, social bookmarking, search and activity analytics while
providing security and provisioning controls.
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The AquaLogic programs were largely developed by Plumtree, acquired by BEA in
2005. By combining them with its own process management tools, BEA expects to
support flexible knowledge-management systems and simpler ways to discover how
data is being accessed and by whom.
“There’s a lot of information locked up in people’s brains,” said BEA
technology evangelist Martin Percival. “Companies don’t just rely on systems but
interact socially, for example by finding the expert in the group. That plays
into the hands of the social-computing revolution and there’s a new generation
of people who are more used to these concepts than the ones used by the old
fogeys.”
However, the new tools require monitoring, he said.
“There’s been a temptation for users to go off and find their own solutions.
Once you do that, you lose control and [a rule such as] Sarbanes-Oxley comes to
get you.”
Many business software developers are now taking a cue from the consumer web
to add new user interfaces, user-generated content, mashups, blogs, wikis and
other tools.
IBM earlier this year released
Lotus
Connections, a tool for business users to explore and advertise areas of
expertise, while Microsoft added wiki functions to
SharePoint.
Startups such as SuccessFactors in
on-demand employee performance management, and
Corizon in creating mashups of new
front-ends on ageing business applications, are also taking advantage of the new
technologies.
However, some warned that the novelty of Web 2.0 technologies is demanding a
high price for skills.
"Traditionally, a solid app developer could do the job, now you need far more
client end skills, such as JavaScript and Ajax, and they are not easy to come
by," said Ged Waring, chief technology officer at
Seatwave, an online ticket marketplace.
IT staffing trade group Atsco said web
developer rates are up by over 25 percent year on year as firms turn to poaching
in order to compensate for insufficient graduate talent.
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