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Oracle finally placed its cards down on the table regarding its roadmap for BEA
products, and for the most part there's little surprise. As
Gavin Clarke reported several weeks ago, Oracle will be deconstructing AquaLogic.
But taking a cue from its Applications
Unlimited Strategy, Oracle is telling BEA customers that it will support all
existing BEA products, regardless of whether they wind up on maintenance.
Cut to the chase, Oracle's choices for strategic products going forward are
not exactly a shock. WebLogic Server, until a few years ago the leader in the
space, is going to be Oracle's Java middle tier going forward. It wasn't until
Oracle 11g that, in Larry Ellison's words, it finally got the appserver right.
So it's obviously going with the more established offering. Tools are another
story: Oracle claims to be the second largest contributor to Eclipse, yet it
continues to spurn the IDE on which the Eclipse Foundation was founded. Instead,
Oracle focused its efforts on EclipseLink,
the implementation of JPA that it donated to Eclipse.
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While Oracle has been schizoid in its Eclipse strategy, BEA was schizoid on
tools in general. Originally embracing a VB-like approach with the original
WebLogic Workshop, BEA later forsook the technology following acquisition of
an Eclipse-based successor, throwing its installed base into a confusing migration
strategy. No question here as to which way Oracle is going.
In other areas, Oracle's roadmap is a case of seasoning its Fusion portfolio
with BEA pieces where they fill gaps. That includes AquaLogic Service Bus, which
now gets fortified with Oracle's service composition fabric that comprises its
implementation of the proposed SCA standard. Ditto for SOA governance, where
AquaLogic Repository fills a gap, and where both relied on OEM bundles with
Systinet for the UDDI service registry. And the same goes for entitlements,
a BEA technology that will be added to Oracle's Access Management suite. As
for BPM, BEA's AquaLogic offering -- the former Fuego product -- provides the
middle ground for business unit level implementation that complements the top-down
of its existing bundled offering from IDS Scheer. While BEA/Fuego customers
liked the degree of control that their tool provided, under Oracle they are
going to have to give up the run time to Oracle's BPEL Process manager. Call
that a case of realpolitik.
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