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SAP Focuses on Web Services, SOA with mySAP ERP 2005
Published: May 24, 2006
by Alex Woodie
SAP last week announced the general availability of the next version of its flagship ERP product. Dubbed mySAP ERP 2005. The new release adds new capabilities in the areas of Web services and service oriented architecture (SOA), which the company hopes will entice its legacy R/3 users to upgrade. The enterprise software giant also announced a new interface for Linux and Macintosh systems to go along with its recently announced "Duet" interface for Microsoft Office, and a plug-and-play X64-based data warehousing appliance called the Business Intelligence accelerator.
SAP is battling with Oracle, Infor (which is merging with SSA Global), and Lawson Software for midmarket ERP sales. A good percentage of these potential customers are already running older editions of their enterprise applications, and so the battle becomes who can amass the greatest user base. However, even as it pillages users from Oracle through its Safe Passage program and its third-party maintenance unit, TomorrowNow, SAP has legacy problems of its own. Most SAP customers have yet to make the jump up to the mySAP line of products, and are still running the widely successful R/3 ERP suite. SAP hopes its SOA development strategy can roust these reluctant customers out of their legacy doldrums.
Productized Enterprise Web Services
This is where the new version of mySAP ERP comes in. With this release, SAP says it has introduced the first completely "service enabled" ERP product. By this, SAP means it has taken certain specific functions, such as finance, human resources, procurement, and logistics, which it previously offered through its various mySAP Business Suite offerings, and built them down into the core ERP component of the mySAP 2005 suite. SAP plans to provide customers the capability to access up to 500 specific business processes as Web services in June, when the company ships the next release of NetWeaver and the mySAP Business Suite.
The new Web services in mySAP ERP 2005 will enable users to more quickly and easily connect with the business systems of their customers and suppliers, says Henning Kagermann, SAP's CEO. "Now customers and partners can build composite solutions on top of our service-enabled suite," he says. "Customers cannot vertically integrate all they need…..[they need to] partner with suppliers and service providers. And it has to be flexible; the switch has be seamless and done in a minute."
SAP also announced the enterprise services workplace as a way for users, developers, business partners, and even SAP employees to work together on these 500 business processes to be delivered within the 28 industry verticals supported by the mySAP Business Suite. The enterprise SOA exploration tool will be available on the SAP Developer Network at www.sdn.sap.com.
More Announcements
SAP also introduced "Project Muse," a new graphical user interface (GUI) for accessing SAP applications from Linux, Macintosh, and Windows desktops. SAP says Project Muse will provide a "rich" GUI that will enable everyday users to access their "role-based and transactional-based" applications, and which SAP indicates will split the functionality difference between a browser-based interface and full fat-client interface. It will also provide an alternative to "Duet," the recently released product that turns Microsoft Office into a user interface for SAP applications.
The announcements came fast and furious at last week's SAP user event, and the new Business Intelligence (BI) accelerator was almost lost in the mix. This new BI accelerator gives customers a pre-loaded and preconfigured business intelligence solution for performing queries against their data. SAP says BI accelerator, which it co-developed with Intel and which is available on 64-bit Xeon-based blade servers from IBM and Hewlett-Packard, is very fast, and can perform queries up to 200 times faster than competing solutions. The BI accelerator was announced last fall, and is now available.
SAP also made moves in the CRM and Supplier Relationship Management (SRM) areas. On the SRM front, the company announced the acquisition of Fricitonless Commerce, a Massachusetts developer of sourcing solutions for the banking, insurance, manufacturing, life sciences, and telecommunications industries. The company's SRM software is already certified for SAP's NetWeaver middleware, and will become a part of the mySAP Supplier Relationship Management suite when the acquisition is completed, which SAP expects to occur in July.
On the mySAP CRM front, the company announced it will evolve its hybrid software as a service (SaaS) delivery model it announced earlier this year to support the suite of CRM in a SaaS mode. SAP is also expected to begin offering mySAP ERP functions in an SaaS mode, too.
SAP also fortified its IBM relationship with the addition of a new reseller, referral, and solution relationship for mySAP All-in-One. SAP also agreed to support its software on the next release of IBM's DB2 database software, codenamed "Viper."
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