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about IBM

veryard projects > companies > IBM
commentary products tracked links to IBM
IBM's vision of On-Demand Computingbrings together a number of interesting areas of innovation. In combination, IBM's products and services contribute significantly to our vision of Model-Based Management. Rational

Tivoli

WebSphere Business Modeller

Developer Works

veryard projects - innovation for demanding change

Project Catalyst

veryard projects > companies > IBM > project catalyst

Project Catalyst was announced by IBM boss Sam Palmisano in a speech to the IBM Business Leadership Forum in San Francisco, November 12, 2003.  He made the following key points.
 
Provides a method for identifying the key components of a business.
Provides a three-dimensional view - strategic, financial, transformational.
Provides a way to highlight those areas of the business that are differentiating.
Other components that are not differentiating can be evaluated on a cost basis.
The point of the exercise is to show where to start an on-demand transformation.

At Veryard Projects, in collaboration with the CBDi Forum and others, we have been championing the component-based business for many years. We naturally welcome the high profile that IBM is now giving this important topic.
 
more Component-Based Business
Management Briefing and Workshops
book Component-Based Business - Plug and Play (Springer, 2001)


veryard projects - innovation for demanding change

on Demand

veryard projects > companies > IBM > on Demand

IBM has defined an "on-demand" business as responsive, variable, focused and resilient.
 
Responsive Central to the notion of the on-demand business is the need for responsiveness to the demand – satisfying the demand within an appropriate timescale. If the business or market operates on a quarterly cycle, then we want something better than an IT response that takes 18 months – and that only after we’ve undergone a new budgetary cycle. While real-time responsiveness may be an attractive long-term vision, the current  focus of on-demand computing is going to include prompt response rather than dynamic response.

Responsiveness entails a process for responding promptly to the demand and to changes in demand. Ideally, this process may include anticipating and recognizing demand, as well as reacting to it. 

Variable Where it is possible to recognize variety in the demand – and it usually is – this calls for an equal variety in the response, sometime known as requisite variety. We have used the term differentiated service to refer to services that vary with circumstances. Requisite variety may be linked to responsiveness – since if the business supports more variety, it may be more likely that it has an offering that is already close to what you need.
Focused It is unreasonable to expect any organization to maintain high levels of responsiveness and variety across a wide scope, so it is likely that the on-demand business will be highly focused. Differentiated service then links to the strategic differentiation of the on-demand business itself – whose core competences are used to target responsiveness and variety on areas of greatest value to the company and its customers.
Resilient The on-demand business must also be reliable – offering high quality of service at low risk. In order to combine high levels of availability and security with high levels of flexibility, the on-demand business will need to be resilient.

The goals of responsiveness and resilience are both addressed by the idea of autonomic computing – which means self-managed systems.
 
more Services on Demand (CBDi Journal, December 2002)


veryard projects - innovation for demanding change

IBM implementing Model-Based Management

veryard projects > companies > IBM > MBM

Business Process Management Loop Software Development Loop Security Requirements Loop
The WebSphere Business Integration (WBI) toolset offers a loop for business process management:

WBI Modeler supports the design and simulation of a business process, including workflow design.

WBI Application Server connects and integrates an application from a defined set of web services, and executes the workflow.

WBI Monitor tracks the activities and events within the business process, and checks on key performance indicators. 

WBI Monitor feeds live metrics back into the WBI Modeler, with the possibility of dynamic reconfiguration.

WBI Modeler supports the design and simulation of a business process, including workflow design. Among other things, this creates UML models, which can be exported to Rose or any other UML tool.

Rational Rose supports the design of a software application from individual components and (web) services. Rose supports a wide range of web service development environments, including IBM’s own WebSphere Studio.

WebSphere Studio is the development environment for web services.

WBI Application Server executes the application web services.

WBI Modeler supports the formulation of policies, including security policies, and positioning these within the business process.

Tivoli for Business Integration executes security policies.

Both Tivoli Server and WebSphere Business Integration Server contain workflow engines, either of which can be used to execute the security workflow.

Security and risk events are recorded in a data store (the Tivoli Data Warehouse), which can be interrogated by third party business intelligence tools.

Feedback – both direct from Tivoli and indirect from business intelligence – is available to WBI Modeler to refine the business integration model and associated policies.

vendor
material
analytic
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CBDi Journal, July 2003
Veryard Projects webpages Model-based Management, Web Services for Business Intelligence

veryard projects - innovation for demanding change

Autonomic Computing

veryard projects > companies > IBM > autonomic computing

IBM sees autonomic computing – which means self-managed systems - as one of the key enablers of its on-demand strategy. Autonomic computing is particularly relevant to the goals of responsiveness and resilience.

IBM’s work on autonomic computing has come out of the eLiza research project, and is starting to be trickled into the IBM product range via Tivoli.

Autonomic computing involves making the individual components and services more manageable – which has implications for their design and implementation – as well as providing a separate management layer. For example, IBM envisages a self-managing wrapper around each component – and these wrappers may communicate peer-to-peer, as well as with a central or decentralized management function. The manageability interfaces will (of course) be rendered as web services.

In some complex areas, machines are already better at configuration than humans. One example of this is in large databases – and IBM has already built self-configuration into DB2 (version 8.1 onwards), its flagship database product. This is presented in the form of a wizard, which asks seven key questions and uses expert heuristics to generate a configuration. Data storage hardware has also been taking on a lot of self-management functions, as this is an area where the ratio of labour costs to hardware costs has been shifting most dramatically.

Other IBM products have self-optimization and self-healing functionality. For example, Websphere now includes distributed workload, with failover and hot deployment.
 
vendor
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IBM webpage on autonomic computing
analytic
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CBDi Journal, January 2003
Veryard Projects webpages Autonomic Computing, Model-based Management


veryard projects - innovation for demanding change

Articles published by CBDi Forum

veryard projects > companies > IBM > CBDi Forum

cbdi forum The CBDi Forum is the leading independent source on components and web services. The CBDI Journal is available free to Silver/Gold members of the Forum.  Individual copies can be purchased separately. Visit the CBDI Forum website for free access to news, commentary and product reviews.  Register for free Bronze membership.

articles by Richard Veryard

Title Abstract Date
Managing Services - 
the IBM Story continues
A look at the contribution of WebSphere and Tivoli to the management of complex networks of services. July
2003
Modelling for SOA
The IBM Story
With the recent acquisitions of Holosofx and Rational, IBM is now able to present a broad set of modeling tools for SOA. In this review, we explore IBM’s coverage in detail. May
2003
Autonomic Computing Discusses various approaches to the management of complexity in Service Oriented Architectures - including HP's OpenView product, IBM's autonomic computing, and Sun's virtualization approach. Jan
2003
Services on Demand The next phase of computing - as seen by IBM and other vendors. Dec
2002
more More material on Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA)

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