August 25, 2006; 03:01 AM IBM announced a new portal server for departments eager to start a small
portal project and then build and expand on their initial technology
investment. WebSphere Portal Server serves as the software foundation
for building applications and services that reside within a portal,
best known as a common entry point for business users who need to share
information regardless of where the information resides.
The new portal server offering simplifies the creation and delivery of
portal components by leveraging service-oriented architecture (SOA), an
approach that reuses a company's existing technology systems to more
closely align them with a company's business goals, resulting in
greater efficiencies, cost savings and productivity. For example, a
people finder or awareness feature found in instant messaging products
such as Lotus Sametime can be added to a call center application to
help match a returning customer with a previously-known customer
service representative.
Portal Server leverages a Web 2.0 AJAX-based interface that can help
portal users accomplish more with fewer clicks while also improving
portal performance. Included in the server are standards-based
applications using popular file formats to deliver web content through
Real Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds.
Additional new features of WebSphere Portal Server include:
-- Easier integration with applications
such as Oracle, SAP and BEA, based on
IBM's open standards strategy.
-- Access to nearly 1,000 business partner applications
available at IBM's Portal Catalog at
http://catalog.lotus.com/wps/portal/portal as well as popular
collaboration portlets, including My Work, which provides
access to Microsoft Exchange, IBM Lotus Notes and IBM
Lotus Domino business collaboration software and IBM
Lotus Notes/Domino and Sametime Instant Messaging; My
Vertical News, which provides the top headlines from
MarketWatch's array of general, business and industry news
categories; and People Finder, which provides a way to
quickly locate employees based on name, current job or
organizational context.
-- Advanced personalization and customization features, such
as the use of new rules for business users to show or hide
pages to help businesses improve team productivity. In
addition, portal server offers new navigation tools with drag
and drop capabilities to dynamically rearrange page layouts.
"Business managers want to retain ownership of their portal and its
content and they want a platform that allows them to easily customize
their desktops," said IBM Business Partner Dennis Rot, portal
architect, Portico Consultancy. "As our customers' portals mature,
we're seeing a growing demand for composite applications. Portal Server
will meet our customers' needs for portal solutions that reduce
existing administrative loads and offer an enhanced user experience."
"Using WebSphere Portal Server as the front-end of a company's SOA
ensures customers can take advantage of easy-to-use solution templates,
a development environment based on open standards and aggressive
pricing and packaging," said Mike Rhodin, general manager, Workplace,
Portal and Collaboration Software. "The added features in this latest
release gives new portal users even more powerful tools to define and
create a customized workplace that significantly improves productivity."
Businesses that start with portal server as their foundation portal can
easily upgrade to other offerings in the WebSphere Portal family with
WebSphere Portal Enable and WebSphere Portal Extend.
Pricing and Availability
Portal Server is available through two options: purchasing 20 user
packs for $2,500 or purchasing on a per processor basis for $50,000.
These two options include one year of support and maintenance.
IBM WebSphere Portal Enable is $95,000 per processor while IBM WebSphere Portal Extend is $130,000 per processor.
www.ibm.com/software/genservers/portal/
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