Enterprise Application Integration (EAI)

As enterprises spread their boundaries across different business areas, they acquire disparate technology solutions, technologies and applications. However, these applications are often unable to communicate and share information with each other due to several reasons like lack of interoperability, variable formats and dissimilar standards of operations.

Even in our enlightened times, great amounts enterprise data lies locked away in monolithic applications. Whether they be purchased, home-grown, or a combination, the realities of business demand that the information contained in those vertical ‘silos’ be used in ways that the original architects never intended.

Enterprises are also increasingly looking forward to reconfigure their business processes through tighter integration of applications from multiple vendors, by opting for Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) . This is with the intention to achieve effective communication across various business applications and delivery channels, thereby, ensuring seamless data integration from disparate systems.

Complex technologies and changing business environments are among the main challenges faced by organizations on the path to growth. Taking these elements into account, you need to integrate the latest technology components that can seamlessly align with your business and drive organizational efficiency. Understanding the complexities of the IT environment we, Datassay extend our system integration expertise to ensure that the technology is in line with your business objectives no matter the size and nature of your organization

Datassay, provides solutions and approaches for integration tools and platforms such as IBM WebSphere MQ, TIBCO, Vitria, SeeBeyond, WebMethods, or BizTalk, messaging systems such as JMS,WCF, or MSMQ, ESB’s such as Sonic, Fiorano, ServiceMix, Mule, Apache Synapse, or WSO2, and SOA and Web-service based solutions.

Enterprise Application Integration or EAI practice expertise focuses on:

Opening up ways for the information to flow from one application to another,

Letting applications to reach other sources of data outside themselves, and

Allowing other programs to peer into the innards of formerly closed programs.

Sharing data between divisions or even between separate corporations.