LÃder de Proyecto at a tech services company with 201-500 employees
Real User
2022-01-04T20:59:00Z
Jan 4, 2022
We are a finance business and this solution is a development platform which has allowed us to create integrations and build solutions quickly. We use it to create the Springboard artifacts with logic connectors as well as Plainview Java codes. Once each of the microservices has been created, Springboard artifacts can be used to create service mesh on the cloud of choice. We are able to create services very quickly because it is just a matter of having the right talent and a customized version of Eclipse. The latest version of OpenLegacy also has a customized version of Intellij. At this point, we don't have OpenLegacy deployed.
VP, Chief Enterprise Integration Architect at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2021-11-10T03:27:38Z
Nov 10, 2021
We're using OpenLegacy to monetize our mainframe assets. I've been doing this for 40-plus years. I was working in diagnostics since CICS and Mainframer. Then I moved to distribution back in the nineties. Everybody has tried to get away from those mainframe applications and assets as much as possible, but the reality is you literally can't. Our bank was bought by this $500 billion bank working with Hogan. I was a Hogan expert back in the eighties and nineties. It's an early-1990s mainframe. Once you're tied up with that kind of stuff, you're not going to easily get off it. I had a boss who always used to say we should be able to get off a mainframe application in two to three weeks. He got fired. There are many people who will try and get you off a mainframe and say that we can port the data. Of course, you can import the data, but here's what people fail to understand about a mainframe. IMS, CICS-transaction, or shared databases — whether it's by IMS Db2 or even VSAM— have been around for 40 years. So that means that, for all intents and purposes, the mainframe is a big PC with a lot of DLLs. And those DLLs allow you to jump from one application seamlessly to another application. So over a 40-year period, it's likely that nobody ever built a component-based architecture on a mainframe, or they may have started with a component-based architecture on a mainframe, but you have data sharing through shared data sets where you have program-to-program jumps from one application to another seamlessly. When someone says they can pull an application out, they failed to take into account 15 other applications that have dependencies. That's the challenge with a project like this. It's like that Jenga game where you pull stuff out. You need technology that allows you to have a bidirectional call in and call out. You have to look for tooling that is flexible within the constraints that you have for that mainframe in the portfolio. Our project went south, and it was a half a billion-dollar project. It might be considered to be a hybrid deployment. On the Microsoft service side, we're running an AWS application in our own tenant. But it's still an AWS public cloud. Obviously, there's the kernel and pieces of code that run on the mainframe. And those pieces that are on the mainframe would be on-prem. So I would call it a hybrid deployment.
IT Department Banking Industry at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2019-08-12T05:55:00Z
Aug 12, 2019
Our primary use is handling data and transactions. I'm working for a bank in the end we develop and we deploy banking systems to resolve day-to-day issues with banking data and transactions while adhering to all the necessary regulations.
OpenLegacy helps organizations quickly launch innovative digital services by extending their core back-end systems to the web, mobile and cloud in days or weeks versus months. Our microservice-enabled API integration and management software quickly reduces project backlog by automating and accelerating microservices and API creation, deployment, testing and management from core applications, mainframes and databases. Together, business and IT teams can quickly, easily and securely meet...
We are a finance business and this solution is a development platform which has allowed us to create integrations and build solutions quickly. We use it to create the Springboard artifacts with logic connectors as well as Plainview Java codes. Once each of the microservices has been created, Springboard artifacts can be used to create service mesh on the cloud of choice. We are able to create services very quickly because it is just a matter of having the right talent and a customized version of Eclipse. The latest version of OpenLegacy also has a customized version of Intellij. At this point, we don't have OpenLegacy deployed.
We're using OpenLegacy to monetize our mainframe assets. I've been doing this for 40-plus years. I was working in diagnostics since CICS and Mainframer. Then I moved to distribution back in the nineties. Everybody has tried to get away from those mainframe applications and assets as much as possible, but the reality is you literally can't. Our bank was bought by this $500 billion bank working with Hogan. I was a Hogan expert back in the eighties and nineties. It's an early-1990s mainframe. Once you're tied up with that kind of stuff, you're not going to easily get off it. I had a boss who always used to say we should be able to get off a mainframe application in two to three weeks. He got fired. There are many people who will try and get you off a mainframe and say that we can port the data. Of course, you can import the data, but here's what people fail to understand about a mainframe. IMS, CICS-transaction, or shared databases — whether it's by IMS Db2 or even VSAM— have been around for 40 years. So that means that, for all intents and purposes, the mainframe is a big PC with a lot of DLLs. And those DLLs allow you to jump from one application seamlessly to another application. So over a 40-year period, it's likely that nobody ever built a component-based architecture on a mainframe, or they may have started with a component-based architecture on a mainframe, but you have data sharing through shared data sets where you have program-to-program jumps from one application to another seamlessly. When someone says they can pull an application out, they failed to take into account 15 other applications that have dependencies. That's the challenge with a project like this. It's like that Jenga game where you pull stuff out. You need technology that allows you to have a bidirectional call in and call out. You have to look for tooling that is flexible within the constraints that you have for that mainframe in the portfolio. Our project went south, and it was a half a billion-dollar project. It might be considered to be a hybrid deployment. On the Microsoft service side, we're running an AWS application in our own tenant. But it's still an AWS public cloud. Obviously, there's the kernel and pieces of code that run on the mainframe. And those pieces that are on the mainframe would be on-prem. So I would call it a hybrid deployment.
Our primary use is handling data and transactions. I'm working for a bank in the end we develop and we deploy banking systems to resolve day-to-day issues with banking data and transactions while adhering to all the necessary regulations.