Open standards cut time and lower cost
Doing business today requires solutions that will scale globally—nothing else can provide availability and low costs
as business networks expand. We have seen the same developments before. E-mail gave us all a way to communicate and the World Wide Web became a global standard for information sharing. As the use of these global technologies exploded, costs plummeted and
the functionality became part of the Internet infrastructure, available to everyone.
Web Services are beginning to provide equally global tools, allowing business applications to publish services that other applications can use – regardless of where they are or how they were built. This will allow
applications to work more like businesses—outsourcing aspects of what they do that are not their core competencies. This can only be achieved by using global standards like XML and Http—the ones web services
are based on. Open standards save costs and provide faster implementation. XML and Http are world standards — integrators do not need to learn proprietary formats and protocols. Global standards mean the availability of inexpensive or
free development tools. They also mean a much larger market for vendors of commercial integration software, allowing more investment in products while lowering the price to the customer.
Unified integration architecture
IFS Foundation1 provides a unified integration architecture completely based on open standards. Information flowing to or from IFS Applications, whether EDI messages, reports, events, or other business services, goes through
a common integration framework with XML as the native format.
With IFS Connect, any service can be published to the world as a web service, transmitted via numerous protocols, integrated with messaging middleware products like Microsoft BizTalk Server or WebSphere MQ Integrator, or
simply exported to a file. IFS Connect has been designed for XML and the Web Services concept, but it can do much more. Integration with legacy systems, EDI handlers, file import/export, and event notification are possible. For example, IFS Connect can be
used to convert XML messages to or from fixed position files and communicated through WebSphere MQ Family with a legacy Cobol application running on a mainframe.
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