To: ahhaha who wrote (159 ) 2/20/2000 6:56:00 PM From: ahhaha Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 811
What the Yahoo posters think of EXLN, Part 2: Javlin by: dipsea 12/20/99 11:38 am Msg: 3682 of 5670 mws, Excelon is the rage right now. But Javlin is definitely the sleeper. EJB is one way to get at data in legacy databases from the Web and Javlin solves real problems with persistence and caching for performance. This space will be hot next year when the y2k dust settles and companies try to migrate core applications to new architectures. javlin by: b2btracker 12/20/99 12:03 pm Msg: 3685 of 5670 Javlin will soar when the BEA WebLogic users have performance issues. Many are currently migrating their applications to WebLogic or IBM Web Sphere and are still in development. The WebLogic users who are seeing performance degradation are now looking at javlin. ODIS needs to get a channel program in place with BEA, IBM, HP, and other integrators. Re: Javlin by: mws@metis.no 12/20/99 2:22 pm Msg: 3687 of 5670 Excelon is the rage right now. But Javlin is definitely the sleeper. Actually, Javlin is more likely than eXcelon to bring in revenue to ODIS in the short term, for the reasons you mentioned. The immediate need is to utilize data from legacy systems. Re:Javlin by: b2btracker 12/21/99 11:04 am Msg: 3700 of 5670 Actually, Javlin is more likely than eXcelon to bring in revenue to ODIS in the short term. I'm not so sure that Javlin will bring in more revenues than eXcelon, even in the near term. How many Javlin Servers can you sell with a BEAS Weblogic or IBM WebSphere server? One to One relationship? ODIS will make more money by signing up software partnerships(software royalties). More partnerships mean more channels. I believe that eXcelon should bring in more revenues than Javlin. It also depends on how each deal is structured. Same company new strategy by: elegantfowl_12/22/99 8:44 am Msg: 3742 of 5670 Sorry being cute. ObjectStore, eXcelon, Javalin are different products: ObjectStore stores C++ and Java objects, eXcelon stores XML objects, Javalin stores Enterprise Java Beans. (roughly, all 3 products use Java for extension programming) The ObjectStore product had the broken strategy of charging developers lots of money up front. The new products don't.