BEA, Adobe forge rich Internet apps partnership
Bundling Adobe's Flex software with BEA's Workshop Studio Java
InfoWorld - BEA Systems Inc. and Adobe Systems Inc. are partnering on rich Internet application development in an arrangement incorporating both service-oriented architecture (SOA) and Web 2.0 concepts.
The deal is being announced today at the BEAWorld 2007 San Francisco conference.
Under the agreement, BEA will bundle Adobe Flex Builder 2 software with the BEA Workshop Studio Java development environment. Using the bundled offering, developers will be able to build cross-platform rich Internet applications that integrate with SOA and Web 2.0 infrastructures. Enterprise mashups will also be possible.
"[The agreement] gives our developers access to the most innovative, rich Internet application platform," said Bill Roth, vice president of BEA's Workshop business unit.
The agreement also enables Adobe to distribute evaluation licenses of the BEA WebLogic Server Java application server with Adobe LiveCycle Enterprise Suite software, which is used to build customer engagement applications.
Combining Flex Builder and Workshop Studio is intended to give developers a tool for building applications like interactive dashboards, customer and employee self-service applications, and business-to-business systems, BEA said. Those applications are deployed using the Adobe Flash Player runtime.
BEA's Workshop Bundle includes Flex Builder 2, Adobe's Eclipse-based IDE, and the Adobe Flex SDK, which is slated to be released under the open-source Mozilla Public License. The bundle is designed to enable developers to add rich interactivity to enterprise applications.
While Workshop already features an SDK and IDE, Roth insisted there was no redundancy. Both Adobe and BEA have built on the Eclipse platform. "That allows both Workshop and Flex Builder to exist in one IDE." Roth said. "Eclipse provides the basic IDE framework. Workshop and Flex fill it out."
Rich Internet applications developed with Workshop and Flex will be able to be integrated with other BEA products, such as offerings from the WebLogic and AquaLogic families. This enables corporations to take advantage of Web 2.0 and SOA technologies, BEA said. Applications can be deployed using the planned Adobe Integrate Runtime technology for extending rich Internet applications to the desktop.
"The Web 2.0 angle is, I think, really where Flex is really strong in allowing a more focused user interface and allowing a richer environment," Roth said. "Web 2.0 is about collaboration," and interacting with the customer, he added.
For SOA, Adobe's architecture offers presentation services as well a framework for Flex applications to integrate with standard enterprise Java applications and SOA, Roth said.
BEA's endorsement of Flex does not necessarily mean the company is choosing it over the popular AJAX (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) technology for Web development.
"In fact, we view both AJAX and Flex as being important rich Internet options, and our customers are looking for that," Roth said. "We found that segments of the customer base that are more developer-centric have a preference for AJAX while those who are more concerned with the interaction and have fairly significant interaction needs in terms of flexibility and creativity tend to go with Flex," especially in a corporate context, he said.
AJAX leverages HTML and JavaScript while Flex runs in the Flash Player, extends the browser and has capabilities involving graphics rendering, animation and client code performance, said Phil Costa, Adobe's director of product management for Adobe Flex and ColdFusion. The Flex programming model focuses on data-driven applications as opposed to HTML, which was developed primarily around a documents paradigm, Costa said.
Workshop bundled with Flex Builder 2 is due to be available by the end of the year, with pricing starting at $899 retail.
Also under the agreement, customers will be able to deploy LiveCycle ES applications that leverage characteristics of WebLogic Server, including Java Message Service, to support business events, clustering and failover. Web services interoperability technologies such as WS-I Basic Profile 1.1 will be supported. While LiveCycle has worked with WebLogic Server before, the new offering gives users a turnkey infrastructure for enterprise deployments.
LiveCycle with WebLogic Server will available as a turnkey product early next year.
Paul Krill is editor at large at InfoWorld.



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