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Technology Stocks : Commerce One Inc - (CMRC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: puborectalis who wrote (1256)6/21/2000 1:14:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1938
 
Commerce One partners with XML
software startup
June 20, 2000
by Adam Feuerstein

Commerce One (CMRC) is forming an alliance with a
small Internet software startup to help solve a big
e-marketplace problem.

The startup, XML Solutions Inc., has developed
software that lets large companies set up Web-based
trading networks using XML -- the lingua franca of
Web-based business communications -- while still using
their expensive EDI -- electronic data interchange --
commerce systems.

Over the last week, Commerce One has been busy inking
deals that boost its ability to actually build the Net
marketplaces and exchanges it has touted over the last six
months.

The technology provided by XML Solutions is expected
to figure prominently in the launch of Covisint, the auto
exchange being formed by Ford (F), General Motors
(GM) and DaimlerChrysler (DCX). XML Solutions will
also play a role in Commerce One's aerospace exchange
for Boeing (BA), Lockheed Martin (LMT) and others.

Last week, Commerce One inked a partnership with
enterprise software giant SAP (SAP) and its e-business
arm, SAPMarkets. On Monday, the company said it
was in talks to acquire AppNet (APNT) for $1.38 billion,
a consulting firm that helps build e-marketplaces.

Moving business to the Web
Founded in June 1999, closely held XML Solutions
makes it easy for large companies to move their business
to the Web. These companies, most of which rely on EDI
to transact electronically with partners, have been
reluctant to ditch the system for New Economy solutions
such as Web-based marketplaces built around XML.

This structural hurdle has been frustrating for small and
midsize businesses as well. Smaller companies lack the
millions of dollars required to invest in EDI systems, so
they've been shut out from electronic trading with large
customers.

Adding to the problems: Almost every industry has
evolved its own "flavor" of EDI, which further hinders
inter-industry electronic commerce.

Upstart business-to-business software companies such as
WebMethods (WEBM) and OnDisplay (ONDS) have
tackled a portion of this problem with customized
adapters that convert different flavors of EDI. But these
adapters don't adress conversion of EDI documents into
XML, and they often have to be ugraded or changed
when a company upgrades its EDI system, says Kate
Fessenden, an XML analyst with Aberdeen Group.

Seamless translation
Fessenden says XML Solutions tries to tackle the
problem with a "transformation engine" that translates
seamlessly all flavors of EDI into XML and vice versa.
The company's technology even understands different
languages, so a French company using EDI can transact
seamlessly with a small U.S. customer using XML.

"Companies like us because we save them time and
money, and they don't have to ditch their EDI systems to
participate in Web-based commerce," says Daryn
Walters, XML Solutions' vice president of marketing.

Aberdeen's Fessenden says XML Solutions is not as well
known as WebMethods, but that should change as more
online marketplaces move from drawing board to launch.

"XML Solutions is very clever about making e-business
less painful for companies," she says. "EDI is such a huge
investment for large companies, so with XML Solutions,
they don't have to give that up."

XML Solutions also opens new selling opportunities for
smaller companies that don't have to worry about handling
EDI documents, she adds.

[Fessenden is careful to note that while XML Solutions
and WebMethods compete in some respects, their
respective technologies can also be complementary.]

Linking companies
Commerce One intends to use XML Solutions to link
companies using EDI into the online marketplaces and
exchanges it powers. The two companies already share
one large client, General Motors. Commerce One is the
e-commerce software provider for GM's
TradeExchange marketplace, which will be morphed, in
some form, into Covisint. XML Solutions was hired by
GM to provide EDI-to-XML translation technology for its
network of thousands of suppliers, many of which have
been using phone and fax to process orders because they
don't have EDI systems.

"We believe that XML Solutions will assist the rapid
integration of EDI systems with Commerce One's
MarketSite portal and that XML Solutions provides an
outstanding product for EDI to XML mapping," says
Kevin Schick, vice president of product strategy for
Commerce One.

XML Solutions was founded by Kevin Kail, Jeff Ricker
and Michael Bailey. The company raised $20.1 million in
venture financing.