Oracle has announced details of a new
integration architecture and plans to create composite programs based on
elements from individual applications. Although the firm poured cold water on
speculation that the project represented a diversion from the Fusion
applications development approach to unite disparate applications lines, the new
plans could help retain customers by helping them exploit current assets.
First referred to as Project X, the Application Integration Architecture is a
standards-based platform based on the business process execution language (BPEL)
to deliver application solutions that use a common object and service model.
“It’s a way of allowing applications to talk to each other,” said Paco
Aubrejuan, Oracle applications strategy vice-president.
“This will be a non-persistent object layer that transforms and enriches
applications.”
Although primarily aimed at Oracle applications, the architecture could also
be used with home-grown and third-party programs, Aubrejuan added.
Oracle will also offer Process Integration Packs that are intended to solve
common scenarios by leaning on functionality embedded in individual programs.
The first of these will be launched at the end of May with an order-to-cash
program that uses elements from Siebel and the Oracle E-Business Suite, and an
opportunity-to-quote program that uses elements from Siebel CRM On-Demand and
the E-Business Suite.
“It’s not a one-shot deal but what we want to do is offer our governance
model and a how-to guide,” said Aubrejuan. “We’re saying, ‘here’s how we did it’
because we’ve been faced with the same challenges as customers.”
Separately, Aubrejuan said that contrary to speculation, Oracle has not
changed its roadmap for Fusion applications. However, some watchers argued that
the integration plan could act as placeholder.
Neil Macehiter of analyst Macehiter Ward-Dutton said, “The Fusion
applications are still some way off and, even when they do arrive, customers are
not necessarily going to migrate from the Oracle, Siebel, PeopleSoft and JDE
solutions. The Application Integration Architecture provides customers with the
means to support business processes which span those application stovepipes, so
it does plug a pre-Fusion gap.”
Although Oracle said the architecture was a higher–level initiative than
SAP’s xApps, Macehiter said that plans to bring partners into the mix meant that
“the overall vision bears a striking resemblance to xApps, allowing the partner
ecosystems to build out from the Oracle applications platform to address
horizontal and vertical market requirements. Getting the buy-in from the systems
integrators will be key in this regard.”
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