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To: Night Writer who wrote (408)5/15/2002 11:31:11 AM
From: Night Writer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4345
 
IBM Prepares Eclipse Application Server Challenge

May 15, 2002 (ComputerWire via COMTEX) -- IBM is throwing a gauntlet down to
rivals by proposing a single, standard plug-in that lets application servers
easily connect into the Eclipse.org framework and workbench.

An interface would potentially mean BEA Systems Inc, Hewlett-Packard Co, Oracle
Corp and Sun Microsystems can plug their application servers into Eclipse.org
without time-consuming integration work. None of these companies are currently
part of Eclipse.

IBM said the plug-in would also enable Microsoft Corp's Windows-operating system
based application server to snap-into Eclipse.

IBM's proposal, though, potentially throws down a challenge to rivals because
the Eclipse framework is already integrated into the company's own WebSphere
application server.

It is unclear whether rival application server vendors - especially BEA - would
want to associate their products with that of their number one enterprise Java
competitor.

Three vendors are actually building their own separate frameworks, which could
rival Eclipse. BEA's WebLogic Workshop, scheduled for July, is a web services
development framework supported by Borland Software Corp and Rational Software
Corp. These companies are expected to hook their respective JBuilder Java and
Unified Modeling Language (UML) tools into WebLogic Workshop.

Sun is fostering its own framework - NetBeans. Ninety vendors support NetBeans
with plug-ins. These include Caldera Systems Inc, BEA and Iona. A further 30
have built integrated development environments (IDEs) using NetBeans, including
Compuware's OptimalJ.

Microsoft, meanwhile, is rabidly opposed to Java - the language used to build
Eclipse. Instead, the company has extended its own framework - the .NET
Framework and Visual Studio.NET into which more than a score of programming
languages can be plugged.

IBM executives admit Eclipse is a way to extend WebSphere. Third-parties' tools
built on Eclipse should operate inside the WebSphere environment as it too is
built on Eclipse.

Rivals' hands could be forced by ISVs. Already, 150 ISVs have joined Eclipse
since IBM announced backing in November 2001. IBM, too, is pushing the rhetoric
of ease-of-use development. By integrating an application server with Eclipse,
developers receive a fast and simpler programming experience as code can be
built and tested on an application server without leaving the IDE.

Integrated development and testing would flesh-out Eclipse's bare bones. These
bones are: a user interface, compiler and debugger for Java, and 14 plug ins.
Those already supporting the basic technologies are IBM, Macromedia Inc and QNX
Software Systems Inc.

Scott Hebner, WebSphere software platform director of marketing, said IBM's
plug-in would promote innovation. He said IBM was not worried about giving away
technology - by offering software to Eclipse, it becomes part of the open source
community. Hebner said IBM's move would help promote standards.

"We are not worried about giving away the crown jewels, because it leads to
innovation higher and higher up the stack," Hebner said.

By Gavin Clarke

Computergram International: Issue 4417, May 15, 2002



(C) Copyright 2002 ComputerWire.