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Q&A: Robert LeBlanc on SOA, BPM, smarter planet

Q&A: Robert LeBlanc on SOA, BPM, smarter planet

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 05 May 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

ComputerWorld Canada sat down with IBM’s senior vice-president for middleware software at Impact 2010 this week to chat about the acquisition of Cast Iron Systems, and the link between services-oriented architecture, business process management and a smart planet

LAS VEGAS--Toronto native Robert LeBlanc joined IBM Canada almost 30 years ago before moving to the company’s New York headquarters where he’s now senior vice-president for middleware software with IBM’s software group. ComputerWorld Canada met up with LeBlanc at the IBM Impact 2010 event where he talked about the company’s recent acquisition of Cast Iron Systems, and the relationship between services-oriented architecture, business process management and the smarter planet vision.

ComputerWorld Canada: With the news of IBM’s acquisition of cloud integration vendor Cast Iron Systems, what role does the cloud play in IBM’s business process management business?

Robert LeBlanc: If you look at any business, it’s made up of a set of business processes and all these interact in some form or another to make up what a client has to do to support the business. If you look at our capability that we’ve got today with SOA and BPM, as clients want to connect their data centre to outside sources, you have to worry about security, data, formats. When it’s inside my organization I have total control and knowledge and I can change things to fit together. When you go to the outside, I need to be able to connect to a cloud service. Cast Iron goes right in between that outside service and your internal systems instead of having to build all this custom code to connect your cloud servers to your data centre. So if you want to integrate your HR system with your salesforce.com, Cast Iron has predefined capability that enables you to connect. Whereas in the past, you’d have to give it to your programmers and they’d have to do a whole bunch of code that maps the differences between the salesforce.com out on the cloud over the Internet Protocol versus what you’d do internally.IMPACT 2010: New IBM framework targets transportation sector

CWC: IBM’s capability lies more in connecting on-premise systems. In the case of external applications, would you say the capability was missing for IBM?


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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