Services
Risaris has domain experts and consultants with over 20 years integration
experience. Domain experts and consultants deliver the following
services to clients and ISVs:
Integration Services
Risaris has expertise in low-level systems work allowing for solutions
and integration efforts across platforms. For example, platforms
where the team has significant experience include:
- z/OS,MVS,ESA,OS390
- Windows
- VM
- Unix (Solaris, HPUX, VAX)
- Linux (SuSE) on x86 and zSeries
- VSE
- BS2000.
Areas of experience that can be leveraged into your environment:
- Enabling a wide range of open source software on mainframe platforms
including Apache, LDAP, Regex, Xerces, unixODBC, Perl, zlib, and
STLPort
- Enabling of mainframe development environment onto Linux (or
Windows) using cross-platform tools such as C/C++ compilers (Dignus),
assemblers (Dignus, Tachyon), linkers, archiver, and FTP.
Consultancy Services
Risaris has deep domain knowledge in the area of SOA and the related
standard such as REST, HTTP, SOAP, WSDL, UDDI, etc. Domain experts
work at a business and technical level to help plan SOA implementations
and implement infrastructure in a non invasive manner minimising
impact on existing business processes.
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SOA Training
Risaris delivers a course on client sites to cover the following
topics:
Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) - The Business Case
This course is a non-technical introduction to implementing an SOA
and showing how it can help your business by reducing costs, increasing
business agility and eliminating duplicate effort within your business.
It illustrates at a high level what SOA means, how it can be implemented
and gives straightforward illustrations of how similar techniques
are used outside of the IT world to gain the similar benefits.
To attend this session, you will simply have a desire to understand
the benefits that SOA can bring to your organisation.
Duration: Half day
Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) - What is it?
There is much hype currently around the concept of a Service Oriented
Architecture or SOA, but how many people really know what this means?
What benefits can it bring? Many of the first assembler programmers
on older platforms could legitimately state that they were implementing
services and thus a Services Oriented Architecture and, since then,
programmers on different platforms in different languages have been
doing the same thing. This course will get under the hype, get down
to what SOA really means, illustrate how it can really help in today’s
complex environments and why. You will also come out of this course
being able to differentiate between SOA implementations that are
'proprietary' and those that are truly open.
To attend this session, it would be useful to have some knowledge
of existing or more traditional approaches for application integration.
Duration: Half day
Implementing a standard SOA - Introduction to the standards
This course gives technical detail about the de facto standards
that are being used today to implement truly interoperable systems
as against the proprietary SOA that some organisations are offering.
It discusses in more technical detail how the standards work and
why. It will also include a short demo showing how the standards
allow interoperability.
To attend this session, you should have some technical knowledge
about connecting applications and systems together and the problems
there are with today's 'traditional' methods to achieve this. Some
knowledge of TCP/IP and HTTP is also desirable.
Duration: Half day
Using SOA Standards to Securely Integrate Existing Resources
This course describes how the latest SOA standards can be used to
securely and efficiently make your existing resources available
as part of your standard SOA infrastructure. This course will illustrate
how your core business IT assets, running on any platform, can play
a full part in the infrastructure rather than being access via adapters
and technologies that are different to configure, prone to error
and different depending on the resources involved.
To attend this session, you should have a good knowledge of the
SOA standards and be familiar with problems with the current mechanism
for integrating legacy data.
Duration: Half day
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