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Application development Toolkit

SAP making strides with new software

Dawn Kawamoto CNET News.com

Published: 09 May 2007 12:28 BST

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Software maker SAP is making strides in the development of its next-generation applications, the company's co-founder said.

Hasso Plattner, who last month, during SAP's Sapphire conference in Atlanta, disclosed details of the company's plans, was back at it again on Tuesday during the Software 2007 conference. And although much of the project, which goes by the code name A1S, is still under wraps, Plattner discussed a few more details.

SAP has yet to disclose pricing and a launch date for the new software, which has been under development for three years.

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Users of the software are expected to be small and mid-sized businesses that are looking for a full range of hosted business applications to plug into SAP's new infrastructure, or A1S. The platform will be built on SAP's NetWeaver, the company's back-end middleware that connects SAP data with other applications, and SAP's Business Suite.

Plattner said the project "will be built on NetWeaver and SAP Business Suite" but that it incorporates newly developed code.

A1S will feature 2,500 interfaces that serve as modules which users can choose to plug into their platform to handle such tasks as manufacturing, payroll and project management. The modules, or structure, will be exposed to users, but the code base will not, Plattner said.

"No code will be exposed, so you have to stick to the interfaces," Plattner said.

The project aims to deliver a faster and potentially less expensive method for users to deploy applications onto their enterprise systems.

The project will also feature in-memory databases, which can greatly increase performance, according to SAP.

SAP, meanwhile, announced on Tuesday that it plans to acquire OutlookSoft, in a move meant to bolster its presence with corporate chief financial officers. OutlookSoft develops software for integration planning, budgeting and forecasting.

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The fact is: Software developers today are really designers and not coders. The reason that business anlaysts exist today to model solutions is because they understand the value of designing software before writing it. All too often developers create code that has little value because they do not understand that business classes interact with other classes within the confines of a working model or pattern.

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