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ActiveGrid Re-brands as WaveMaker
WaveMaker to bring Enterprise Web 2.0 to departmental developers and IT teams
Nov. 7, 2007 08:15 PM
WaveMaker, formerly known as ActiveGrid, has announced a new
corporate brand and product strategy that will address the growing demand for
technology that simplifies the assembly of Web applications, while meeting the
architectural, security and governance policies of CIOs. WaveMaker will bring
to market software enabling the visual assembly and rapid deployment of
scalable, enterprise Web 2.0 applications that are both Web Fast and CIO Safe.
Under the new leadership of CEO Christopher Keene, WaveMaker
is an enterprise Web 2.0 company addressing the competing priorities of
business teams and central IT. By integrating the current technology with
capabilities gained from the company’s acquisition of TurboAJAX, the new
WaveMaker solution eliminates the competing priorities of business-level
developers, who require visual assembly tools and rapid deployment, as well as
CIOs, who require that solutions comply with architectural, security and data
policies. With WaveMaker, Fortune 2000 organizations can fully embrace the
speed, flexibility and increased participation of Web 2.0 architectures while
bridging this critical gap between CIOs and departmental developers.
“For developers who know client/server tools like Notes,
PowerBuilder, Access or Oracle Forms, there are no equivalent visual tools for
building Web apps,” said Christopher Keene, CEO of WaveMaker. “Our vision is to
be the PowerBuilder of Web 2.0 - an easy to use, visual tool for building Web
applications.”
“Most organizations lack the internal resources presently
required to take on the backlog of applications that have been requested,” said
Josh Holbrook, program manager in Yankee Group's Enterprise Research Group. “Further
complicating the issue is the complexity of the tools and platforms required to
build stable, secure and CIO compliant Web applications. In order to address
these problems, organizations are demanding solutions that enable the
development of Web 2.0 applications, using AJAX widgets, Web services and a
database, that can be deployed onto a Java application Server such as Apache
TomCat or J2EE.”
About Salvatore GenoveseSalvatore Genovese is a Cloud Computing consultant and an i-technology blogger based in Rome, Italy. He occasionally blogs about SOA, start-ups, mergers and acquisitions, open source and bleeding-edge technologies, companies, and personalities. Sal can be reached at hamilton(at)sys-con.com.