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Kabira Announces Its Java Technology at JavaOne
New Product Marries a Java Development Environment to the Kabira Runtime Software

Kabira Technologies announced that it is building a Java technology-enabled product to work with its core product technology, the Kabira eXtreme Transaction Platform (KXTP) software. Marrying a Java technology development environment to the Kabira Runtime enables an application developer to inherit integrated transactionality, high performance, transparent distribution, persistent shared memory data, high availability and high-speed channels from Kabira's technology into native Java applications, while preserving the robustness of the Kabira runtime technology.

"Our experience over the last 12 years deploying our technology to over 100 customers in 40 countries, in some of the most demanding mission-critical customer environments around the globe, has allowed Kabira to encapsulate and harden our runtime technology," said Dirk Epperson, global vice president of strategy for Kabira. "Now that KXTP can work with an optional Java technology-based development environment, Java applications can be deployed in extreme environments that require five-nines (99.999%) reliability. Often this requires substantially less code as compared with Java EE or other POJO solutions."

KXTP enables many details to be abstracted away from the developer, so development effort is focused on custom business logic, not APIs. Environmental details can be added by configuration, so business logic code can be re-purposed to new technologies with little or no change, and application logic changes can be implemented more easily, with a higher probability of success. Epperson added, "By leveraging KXTP, Java technology and C++ modules can be seamlessly integrated into a single, orchestrated, transactional work flow."

"We believe that with Kabira, Java developers can attain robustness goals that were previously only accessible in the world of Tandem and mainframe applications," said Paul Sutton, president and chief executive officer of Kabira. "We designed Kabira technology to deliver the performance of the big, at the price performance of the small on open systems hardware like Solaris and Linux." Sutton added, "This means that with Kabira, Java applications can be delivered with real-time mission-critical performance, at a fraction of the cost and investment of existing alternatives. At the same time, this enables companies to scale to meet transaction growth or the need to support more complex transactions, easily and with more favorable impact to a company's bottom-line."

This announcement signals yet another advancement in Kabira's ongoing objective to deliver improved efficiency and speed for the 'Critical Middle of the IT Stack,' that is, to support mission-critical business applications that require five-nines reliability throughout, up through the level of each transaction handled.

"Kabira chose to announce this new product in its product line at JavaOne so it can tap into the experience of the developer, business and analyst communities," said Sutton. Sutton added, "Over the ensuing few weeks we will be synthesizing that input with that of our current customers and information gleaned from beta trials. Our goal is to tune our final Java technology-enabled product offering in a manner that better meets the needs of our customers."

About Java News Desk
JDJ News Desk monitors the world of Java to present IT professionals with updates on technology advances, business trends, new products and standards in the Java and i-technology space.

YOUR FEEDBACK
Sean wrote: Adam: Very valid points. But I think I should clarify the point and intent of this blog post, because it's not entirely evident (even to me) after reading it again. First, however, I do have to disagree that "RIA" and "Web 2.0" are "tech terms." SQL is a tech term. HTTP is a tech term. AJAX is a tech term. RIA is clearly a marketing term (disputably) coined by some clever marketing folk at Macromedia. Web 2.0 was supposedly coined by O'Reilly. When I build a web app (I am a Rails and Flex developer), neither of these terms helps me clarify what the heck I am intending to build. Only drawings do that. Or mock-ups. Or focused discussions of particular features. Throwing in a term like RIA is just verbal hand-waving. I say all this, but these are unimportant arguments. RIA and Web 2.0 aren't going anywhere at this point, so it would be silly of me to call for their permanent banish...
Adam wrote: These ARE valid terms because definitions such as RIA or Web 2.0 help people who build these things to communicate what's required. These are not "public" words. They are tech terms that overarch a wide variety of solutions. Broad terms yes. Whether your grandparents understand what these phrases mean or not is a moot point. Do your grandparents know what a SQL database is? Should we rename it to "software" too? As far as marketing goes, if the term RIA or Web 2.0 is used when pitching to a client then it _is_ useful because of how the approaches that underpin what these phrases stand for differ from traditional web sites. So you want Web 2.0? If you mean more user interaction, comments, gradings etc... then beware that users can comment negatively as well as positively - what will that mean to your brand if this occurs? Plus it'll cost you more because of x, y, and z. Architecting an...
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