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11/29/2007
Telelogic has improved components of its overall "enterprise lifecycle management" software product suite, which combines model-driven development with application lifecycle management.
The main news is that two of the company's solutions, System Architect and Tau, have been upgraded and now share the same modeling environment using the UML 2.1 standard. This common modeling environment facilitates matters for various members of the IT team, including enterprise architects, business analysts and software engineers.
The company has also enhanced both products. The new versions, System Architect 11.0 and Tau 4.0, are expected to be generally available on December 21.
"The main point is that we've created a common repository," explained Scott McKorkle, Telelogic's director of product marketing. "You're working on models that are accessed and stored in the same location. There is no import, export and handoff. You're just working with a common design model [in both System Architect and Tau]."
The two products didn't have this capability before. An IT team using the two products might typically have communicated using scraps of paper, McKorkle said. Now, it's a lot more sophisticated, and the new capabilities allow IT personnel to view the model based on their role in the development process.
"We've created transformations so that the workflow can be accommodated in a role-based fashion," he said. "A business analyst can do something using Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN) and then transform the data from that model into a similar UML use-case model or activity model so that the developers can work with it. You can have two different people using two different modeling notations working on the same model in their language, and the changes that they make will still be viewable by the other person in their notation."
Moreover, the transformations operate bidirectionally, and traceability is maintained through the project.
Telelogic had originally acquired System Architect when it acquired Popkin Software in April of 2005 for $45 million. The idea back then was to integrate system architect with Telelogic's model-driven development solutions, such as Tau, but that required making the two products' file systems compatible.
System architect is typically used by enterprise architects for overall planning. Tau is used more by the systems engineers or software developers, or those who are responsible for coming up with the deployable system.
One new feature in System Architect 11.0 is time-based analysis. It lets enterprise architects model how they want the system to appear, using a time-phased progression from the system's current state to its future state.
"You can not only see how you get there and the necessary steps to get there, but you can analyze along the way the impact that's going to have on your organization as you take each step," McKorkle said.
North Idaho College will be implementing a new classroom capture system as part of an effort to provide accessible education to students with disabilities. The college will be using SpeakerBox from ClearSky Systems for the lecture capture program beginning in January 2009.
The College of Southern Nevada (CSN), a community college in Las Vegas with 41,000 students, has adopted the Angel Learning Management Suite (LMS) to support its online course offerings. In Spring 2008 CSN began evaluating alternatives to WebCT, which it currently runs, and made the decision to adopt Angel in the fall. In January 2009, CSN's 865 sections of online enrollment will be delivered using the Angel LMS.
Mitsubishi has begun shipping a new LCD-based SXGA+ projector aimed at higher education, specifically medical schools. The new MH2850U, according to Mitsubishi, is "specially engineered for projecting DICOM simulation images for use in medical education and training."
Last month, ActiveState released Komodo IDE 5.0, the company's latest integrated development environment (IDE). Komodo supports multiple programming and markup languages, including HTML, JavaScript, PHP, Perl, Java, Python, C++ and more. It does not support some .NET languages at present, such as ASP/ASP.NET, C# and VB.NET.
IBM last week announced consulting services specifically designed to help organizations assess their options in using cloud computing technology. "Cloud computing" is a much argued term, but it typically refers to solutions delivered over the Internet, rather than via customer premises-installed software.
Hollins University, among other higher ed institutions in Virginia, has implemented Omnilert's e2Campus emergency notification system (ENS) just ahead of a state-mandated deadline requiring them at every public institution of higher education by Jan. 1. Hollins itself isn't a public campus, but wished to implement an ENS before the end of the year, the school said in a company statement.