fhs
Volume 7, Number 12 -- March 27, 2007

NGS Boosts BI Offerings for System i

Published: March 27, 2007

by Alex Woodie

System i shops looking to build new Web-based dashboard applications may want to take a look at the latest offerings unveiled by New Generation Software this month. NGS has delivered a new release of its flagship IQ Server and a new release of its Business Performance Dashboard that should make it easier for System i shops to deliver graphical dashboard views of their DB2/400 data, without the level of data massaging that it once required.

NGS launched its Business Performance Dashboard in November 2005 as a way to present non-technical users and executives with data from DB2/400 in the form of charts, tables, gauges, maps, and other visualization tools. Instead of requiring users to write queries and then interpret the business significance of the numeric output, Dashboard presents key performance indicators (KPIs) graphically in a Web browser as defined by the 150-plus templates included with the product, and then does the grunt work of continually updating and refreshing that information from DB2/400 (via hooks into the NGS-IQ server), without additional work or input from the user.

With the delivery of Business Performance Dashboard version 4.5 this month, NGS has improved the integration between the Dashboard and NGS-IQ, particularly as it relates to summary data and generation of the XML that underlies the Dashboards. (While NGS Dashboards are delivered as Adobe Macromedia Flash presentations, the underlying data exchange mechanism between the Dashboard and IQ Server is XML.)

According to NGS, IQ Server now assigns results of report break summary and field calculations their own, individual XML tags when users output to XML, a new capability that provides greater flexibility when generating XML files and simplifying the development of dashboard applications from DB2/400 data. Version 4.5 also gives users the option of exporting dashboards to Microsoft Word, in addition to Excel, PowerPoint, and HTML.

Fine-tuning the look and feel of NGS dashboards is also easier thanks to a new "panel set" component that enable users to navigate between files in a presentation, embed JPG or Flash animation files into the frames, and adjust formatting features. The new release also lets users add animation to their chart components, provide additional information for displaying stock market information (such as a stock's opening, close, high, and low prices), and provides three new graphical "skins": graphite, halo, and Windows classic.

NGS provides IT staff with the tools to make BI easy for business users to consume, says Bernard Gough, president of NGS. "It's our job to really work with the IT staff, to give them the tools to allow them to look good, to give them what they need that doesn't cost them a lot of overhead and that leaves them in charge of the data integrity," he says. "With a minimal amount of training, even a small IT staff can have a working dashboard or OLAP [online analytical processing] in production within two weeks."

Gough says Dashboard is gaining traction in the System i marketplace, where there is "definitely an uptick" in business intelligence spending. "We're seeing a lot of activity in the market right now. [Dashboard] is involved in every sale and proposal," he says. "The OLAP environment we provide is really slick and people love it, but it's still an analyst-type person's product. With Dashboard, we can touch a lot of people without a lot of training."

Meanwhile, NGS also unveiled NGS-IQ version 6.5, a new release of its flagship product, which includes the of i5/OS-based IQ Server and Qport Access, the Windows-based client component. Qport SmartView, the company's Windows-based OLAP offering for analyzing data across more than two dimensions, is an optional component of the NGS-IQ suite.

In addition to the above-mentioned enhancements to IQ Server that improves the delivery of XML to the Dashboard, NGS-IQ 6.5 benefits from other enhancements, including more options to work with dates and times. Users can now create date new fields from existing date fields, character fields, literal, or system values, and output the date new fields in a variety of formats, including MM/DD/YYYY, YYYY-MM-DD, DD.MM.YYYY, and YY/DDD. User can also incorporate forward slashes, hyphens, periods, commas, or blanks as the separator in the new field. New timestamp options have also been included.

Integration between Qport Access and Microsoft Office has also been enhanced with this release. NGS says users who like to work with DB2/400 data in Excel will appreciate the new feature that allows Qport Access to retain leading zeroes in an alphanumeric field when outputting a NGS-IQ query to Excel--an important capability for companies that enter zeros at the beginning of account numbers, part numbers, customer ID codes, or other fields and then to make sure that Excel doesn't treat these numbers as numeric values.

Security has also been boosted with NGS-IQ 6.5 thanks to the new support for long and mixed-cased passwords when connecting from Qport Access to the System i and when attempting to invoke the FTP and Remote Network Output file functions. NGS says this feature will greatly increase the number of passwords that can be assigned.

NGS provides out-of-the-box support for a variety of i5/OS applications and DB2/400 data sources, such as the S2K ERP suite from VAI, which has been one of NGS' most successful OEM relationships, Gough says. By mapping out the data paths to popular i5/OS applications before the product gets into customers hands, it makes it much faster to implement, he says.

In the coming weeks and months, NGS plans to announce pre-formatted support for two additional data sources. The first is an enhanced NGS IQ-based data mart for Siemens Medical Solutions' MedSeries 4 (MS4) systems. The second is for the creation of financial data marts based on i5/OS general ledger (GL) applications. "We see that as a big demand area, particularly with the bigger customers," Gough says of the GL data mart.

NGS-IQ 6.5 and Business Performance Dashboard 4.5 are available now. Pricing for both starts at roughly $7,000 for 20-user, two-developer environments on P10 machines, but NGS has several pricing models to fit its customers' needs. For more information, visit www.ngsi.com.

RELATED STORIES

NGS Updates Business Intelligence for Vormittag

NGS Releases Business Intelligence for Health Care Industry

NGS Provides a Quick 'Dashboard' View into Business Performance



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
BYTWARE

Enhance your System i for free!

In honor of its 20th year serving theSystem i community,
Bytware is giving away 20 free licenses of PeekPlus,
the user monitoring, security enhancement, and
help desk tool that started it all!

Just license Messenger or StandGuard Network Security
and you will be entered into a drawing for a free license.

Offer expires May 31, 2007,
so get started today!

Call us at 800.932.5557 or
visit us online for more information!


Editor: Alex Woodie
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

Help/Systems:  SEQUEL is the single solution for all your business intelligence needs
COMMON:  Join us at the 2007 conference, April 29 – May 3, in Anaheim, California
Bug Busters Software Engineering:  Quality software solutions for the iSeries since 1988


IT Jungle Store Top Book Picks

The System i Pocket RPG & RPG IV Guide: List Price, $69.95
The iSeries Pocket Database Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket Developers' Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket SQL Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket Query Guide: List Price, $49.00
The iSeries Pocket WebFacing Primer: List Price, $39.00
Migrating to WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49.00
iSeries Express Web Implementer's Guide: List Price, $59.00
Getting Started with WebSphere Development Studio for iSeries: List Price, $79.95
Getting Started With WebSphere Development Studio Client for iSeries: List Price, $89.00
Getting Started with WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49.00
WebFacing Application Design and Development Guide: List Price, $55.00
Can the AS/400 Survive IBM?: List Price, $49.00
The All-Everything Machine: List Price, $29.95
Chip Wars: List Price, $29.95

 

The Four Hundred
IBM to Meet Upset WDSc Shops Half-Way on Features?

Oracle Sues SAP Over 'Corporate Theft on a Grand Scale'

IDC Chops Server Forecasts Thanks to Virtualization, Multicore Chips

As I See It: Workplace Heaven

The Linux Beacon
Red Hat Integrates and Simplifies with RHEL 5

The Feeds and Speeds of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5

Transaction Processing Council Launches TPC-E Benchmark

Mad Dog 21/21: The China Spin Drone

Big Iron
Flex-ES And IBM: Can They Bend? Are They Broken?

Top Mainframe Stories From Around the Web

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

Four Hundred Guru
iSeries Navigator Job Monitor

Reader Feedback on Using the SQL SET OPTION Statement

Changing ODBC Sign-On Pop Up Values

System i PTF Guide
March 17, 2007: Volume 9, Number 11

March 10, 2007: Volume 9, Number 10

March 3, 2007: Volume 9, Number 9

February 24, 2007: Volume 9, Number 8

February 17, 2007: Volume 9, Number 7

February 10, 2007: Volume 9, Number 6

The Windows Observer
IDC Chops Server Forecasts Thanks to Virtualization, Multicore Chips

Microsoft Looks to Boost Voice Strategy with TellMe Buy

Disaster Recovery in a Truck Unveiled by IBM, Cisco

Gateway Adds Entry Opteron Tower Server, Windows NAS Arrays

The Unix Guardian
Sun Taps Linux Guru to Guide Operating System Strategy

IBM's Plan for an Adjacent, Custom Systems Market

IDC Chops Server Forecasts Thanks to Virtualization, Multicore Chips

Mad Dog 21/21: The China Spin Drone

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

New Generation Software
MKS
Seagull Software
Bytware
RJS Software Systems



TABLE OF CONTENTS
IBM and 3Com Unveil New Collaboration Solution for System i

Centerfield Aims to Ease iSeries SQL Management with AutoDBA

MaxAv Updates System i High Availability Software

NGS Boosts BI Offerings for System i

News Briefs and Product Shorts:


CCSS Adds DASD Monitoring to QSystem Monitor V12 . . . KMR Taps looksoftware to Modernize i5/OS Apps . . . VAI-EXTOL Integration Benefits Customers . . . 'BI for the Warehouse Guy' Unveiled by ICS and Q4bis . . . Disaster Recovery in a Truck Unveiled by IBM, Cisco . . . Informatica Tackles SaaS Data Integration Issues with SaaS Offering . . .

Four Hundred Stuff

BACK ISSUES





 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement