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By: Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst, Interarbor Solutions Published: 10th March 2010 Copyright Interarbor Solutions © 2010 |
In a move to tackle a persistent cloud computing challenge,
Cast Iron Systems just rolled out a new platform that aims to
help companies large and small securely integrate public clouds,
private clouds and on-premise applications.
Dubbed OmniConnect,
the cloud integration solution offers a single platform rather
than multiple products or on-premise tools to accomplish cloud
integrations.
Five pillars undergird OmniConnect: complete integrations, a
complete cloud experience, reusability of connectivity and
processes, and portable, embeddable, and brandable environments,
and centralized cloud management.
"Cloud application use is exploding, but just because you like
Salesforce.com doesn't mean you are going to throw out SAP,
Oracle or other applications you have on-premise. It's a hybrid
world where companies have a combination of cloud and on-premise
locations," says Chandar Pattabhiram, vice president of Channel
and Product Marketing for Cast Iron Systems. "You don't maximize
the value of your cloud applications unless you get all the data
into it—so you need integration."
Complete integrations
Integration can get complex in a hurry with a growing number of
applications in the enterprise, such as Salesforce, Google Apps,
WebEx and ADP. Companies could take a do-it-yourself approach but
it won't scale over time. Companies could also use an on-demand
vendor for cloud-to-cloud scenarios, or hire an on-premise
integration firm. Cast Iron Systems, though, is pushing
OmniConnect as a better solution.
"Fifty-six percent of CIOs in a Gartner survey said they are
transitioning away from the cloud because too many choices make
it too difficult," Pattabhiram says. "Our new platform is meant
to solve this problem by bridging the on-premise and cloud
worlds. We offer complete integrations that include data
migration, process integration, and UI mashup
capabilities."
OmniConnect, for example, lets SaaS applications access, cleanse,
and synchronize data stored in legacy systems in real-time and
completes processes such as quote-to-order, purchase-to-pay, and
order-to-cash without leaving the Cast Iron OmniConnect
environment. The platform can also mash up the data from
disparate sources and display them in a single view without
taking the data out of one application and putting it into
another.
Users can configure their integration processes in the cloud, run them in a multi-tenant cloud-based environment, and monitor all integrations from a single cloud-based console. And the Cast Iron Secure Connector aims to overcome data security issues by offering a secure channel that exchanges encrypted or firewalled data between enterprise applications and Cast Iron’s multi-tenant cloud service.
Reusability, portability and management
Cast Iron also announced a new Connector Development Kit that
works to streamline building connections to new applications and
data sources. The kit allows IT gurus to re-use connectivity
created in OmniConnect to snap in connections to public clouds,
private clouds, and on-premise applications. OmniConnect also
offers reusable templates of the most common processes.
Portability is another feature that Cast Iron is boasting about. The software lets users make integrations or the entire OmniConnect portable into any public cloud, private cloud or on-premise data center environment. Infrastructure providers can also embed and brand the platform as their own integration-as-a-service offering. ADP, Dell and Cisco are already reselling the service.
There is significant value in having one platform rather than
multiple solutions to bridge private cloud, public cloud and
on-premise applications.
Finally, a cloud-based management console makes it possible for
users to monitor multiple integrations across customer
deployments in a single location. Management APIs are available
for IT and SaaS providers to view the monitoring data within
their private or public clouds. Cast Iron also announced support
for Amazon Web Services customers through
integration-as-a-service.
"Security and integration are the two biggest concerns cited in
Gartner's study," says Pattabhiram. "That's why you see
mega-brands partnering with us. They want to have an enterprise
grade solution to help their customers adopt their cloud
applications. There is significant value in having one platform
rather than multiple solutions to bridge private cloud, public
cloud and on-premise applications."
BriefingsDirect contributor Jennifer LeClaire provided editorial assistance and research on this post. She can be reached at http://www.linkedin.com/in/jleclaire and http://www.jenniferleclaire.com.
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