impact 2014 iec1159 - trends in integration & governance

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PowerPoint Presentation

IEC1159:
IBM Integration & Governance

Nicola HillsDevelopment Director, WebSphere Integration & Governance

@nickiehills

Please Note

IBMs statements regarding its plans, directions, and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice at IBMs sole discretion.

Information regarding potential future products is intended to outline our general product direction and it should not be relied on in making a purchasing decision.

The information mentioned regarding potential future products is not a commitment, promise, or legal obligation to deliver any material, code or functionality. Information about potential future products may not be incorporated into any contract. The development, release, and timing of any future features or functionality described for our products remains at our sole discretion.

Performance is based on measurements and projections using standard IBM benchmarks in a controlled environment. The actual throughput or performance that any user will experience will vary depending upon many factors, including considerations such as the amount of multiprogramming in the users job stream, the I/O configuration, the storage configuration, and the workload processed. Therefore, no assurance can be given that an individual user will achieve results similar to those stated here.

General Trends & Directions

Trends & Directions

1) SOA

It may not be a high fashion trend, but it is the implementation trend, this is actually what we see clients building today

Trends & Directions

SOA

Mobile

API management mobile accelerators

IIB Patterns

For IBM Worklight

For IBM MessageSight

Trends & Directions

SOA

Mobile

Cloud

Planning for Cloud

Plans & Roadmaps

Convergence of tasks and approaches

Adventures in Cloud

Cast Iron & API Management LIVE

HVEs All products

IIB Chef scripts

Hybrid Cloud

IIB

Cast Iron

Cloud First

API Management

Cloud Integration with BlueMix

Trends & Directions

SOA

Mobile

Cloud

Shift in user / user expectations

Simple/Obvious

Open

Extendable

Trends & Directions

SOA

Mobile

Cloud

Shift in user / user expectations

Analytics

Services

APIs

Flows

Flow content

Trends & Directions

SOA

Mobile

Cloud

Shift in user / user expectations

Analytics

Industry Relevance

HL7

DICOM

OPC

MQTT

Tlog

POSLog

SO8583

NACHA

$

IBM Integration Bus

Previously known as:WebSphere Message Broker (WMB)& WebSphere Enterprise Service Bus (WESB)

The IBM Integration Bus V10 Beta is now open

Try out future features, provide feedback and influence direction

Register atwww.ibm.com/software/products/en/integration-bus-advanced

Try out a recent open beta driver this week (session IEC-1492)

This is in addition to the V9 lab (IEC-1152)

Weds 3.45pm 6pm in Murano 3303

Register for either 3.45pm 4.45pm or 5pm 6pm slots

Introducing IBM Integration Bus V10 Open Beta

Open

If you look at the Open Beta today what will you see

SimplificationGreatly improved install (you are only going to have time to grab an instant coffee)

Removal of MQ as a Pre-reqFirst class support still for MQ, but no long a must have if you choose not to.

New IIB initiative to develop integration components as open source

Part of continuing tradition of IIB supporting open standards

Source freely available on popular Github website under flexible Eclipse Public License

Community contributions (including modifications) actively encouraged!

Fully supported technologies delivered into IIB as appropriate

Varied initial contributions targeting transferrable, embeddable assetsMQTT Client connectors

Easy-to-use inbound and output connectors to MQTT servers

Uses open framework for platform-independent connectors

DFDL Schemas for popular industry formatsE.g. HL7, ISO8583, IBM4690-TLOG, NACHA, PCAP, EDIFACT

Chef cookbooks for simplified IIB provisioningCustomizable scripts allows building of complete IIB environments

Tools for easier conversion between integration productsInitially targeting WESB to IIB

Source for common integration patterns (e.g. event filter)

Open Technologies for Integration

And don't forget the IBM Integration Community

www.ibm.com/developerworks/connect/integrationArticles

Links

Updates

Including WESB migration

Learn, Input, Participate !

@IBMintegration

Conscious Coupling of our ESB Technologies

Continues as planned

No rush to move (WESB EoS Announced: 2018)

Work with us to plan your activities

Phased Approach

Phase I shipped in IIV v9 as planned

Phase II under development

Framework on GitHub

IBM Integration Bus This Week Selected Sessions

Monday

2.30-3.30 Palazzo H Integration Featured Session

2.30-5.00 Murano 3305 Healthcare Integration Lab

4.00-5.00 Palazzo H What's New in IIB

5.15-6.15 Palazzo H Introduction to IIB

Tuesday10.30-11.30 Palazzo H Cloud Integration Options

10.30-11.30 San Polo 3502 Meet The Experts

1.00-2.00 Palazzo H WESB Conversion

1.00-2.00 Marcello 4403 IIB Retail Integration Pack

1.00-3.15 Murano 3303 IIB V9 Lab

2.15-3.15 Palazzo H Designing for Performance

3.45-4.45 Palazzo H Mobile Integration

5.00-6.00 Palazzo H DFDL Introduction

5.00-6.00 Marcello 4402 Manufacturing in IIB

IBM Integration Bus This Week Selected Sessions

Wednesday

10.30-11.30 Palazzo H .NET Integration

1.00-2.00 Palazzo H Effective Application Development

1.00-2.00 Marcello 4403 IIB Healthcare Integration Pack

1.00-2.00 San Polo 3503 Meet The Experts (Repeat)

2.15-3.15 Palazzo H Effective Administration

3.45-4.45 Palazzo H Applications, Libraries, APIs

3.45-6.00 Murano 3303 IIB Open Beta Lab

5.00-6.00 Palazzo H Transformation Options in IIB

Thursday

9.00-10.00 Palazzo H Predictive Analytics

10.30-11.30 Palazzo H BPM Integration

1.00-2.00 Palazzo H Modelling Industry Formats

2.15-3.15 Palazzo H What's New in IIB (Repeat)

Industry Relevant

Q4 2013IIB Retail Pack 1.0

IBM's plans, directions, and intent are subject to change or withdrawal

Q4 2013

IIB Retail Pack 1.0

Q1 2014IIB Healthcare Pack 3.0

IIB vNext

Q4 2013IIB 9.0.0.1

WebSphere CommerceSterling Order ManagementTLog to POSLogWeb User Interface

IIB Retail Pack vNext

Web User InterfaceHL7 Error Handling ImprovementsHome Health PatternHL7 Transformation Pattern

IIB Industry Packs Roadmap

This chart shows the current Industry pack roadmap. The most recent release of IIB came at the end of 2013, when IIBv9.0.0.1 came out in December. This followed the release of v9 at the end of Q2 in 2013. Version 9 was the first time that WebSphere Message Broker assumed the new name of IBM Integration Bus, so building on this new naming strategy, when the Retail Pack came to market at the end of 2013, it was christened the IIB Retail Pack. This first release provided two new integration patterns in the IIB Patterns Explorer one to integrate WebSphere Commerce with Sterling Order Management, and the other to flow transaction data in the Tlog format from Point of Sale devices in store to a POSLog canonical form in the enterprise. WebSphere Commerce has previously offered a Feature Pack (FEP5) containing WESB mediation modules which integrate with Sterling Order Management, but with IIB now adopting the WESB use case, the IIB Retail Pack provides IBMs strategic solution in this space.

Our next industry pack release came at the end of Q1 2014. This was the IBM Integration Bus Healthcare Pack, version 3.0. Again, adopting the new IIB naming, this pack has been naturally labelled as version 3, as it follows the previous two WMB Healthcare Connectivity Pack releases. This release was the first to offer a Web User interface for the healthcare pack, monitoring clinical applications. It also incorporates two new patterns the Home Health Pattern and the HL7 Transformation pattern. The Home Health pattern uses the Continua Alliance defined web service interface and enables IIB to assume the role of WAN Receiver for taking in data readings from home health devices such as weighing scales, and blood pressure devices for example. The HL7 Transformation pattern provides a development accelerator for healthcare transformation and routing scenarios by generating graphical data maps for one or more of the HL7 messages (defined in chapters 3 to 17 of the standard).

The icons in the middle and the right of the chart represent our current areas of development and future delivery intentions. The red manufacturing logo in the centre will be covered later in this deck when Ill talk about a public Statement of Direction which IBM has published regarding an IBM Integration Bus Manufacturing Pack. The other healthcare icon represents our current plan to produce a Fix Pack release for the IIB Healthcare Pack. Towards at least the end of 2014, there are also icons to represent the next releases of IIB core and the IIB Retail Pack. The black icons at the right of the chart symbolise our openess for client conversations regarding further Industry Packs Insurance, Telecoms, Travel and Transportation, Energy etc.

Whats new in IIB Retail Pack v1.0

IIB Retail Pack v1.0 released in December 2013

Follows the success of WMB Healthcare Connectivity Pack

Integration of WebSphere Commerce with Sterling Order Management

Connects Pricing and Promotions modules (WCS)

Connects Inventory and Order modules (SOM)

6 Applications, 19 integration flows

Integrating Point of Sale with Enterprise

Pattern converts TLog to POSLog

Real-time data feeds from Point of Sale to Enterprise

POSLog as canonical feed

ARTS Operational Data Model integration

Web User Interface

Business views and Operational views

Revenue breakdown across PoS and store location

Operational views to understand retail flow activity

The IBM Integration Bus Retail Pack v1.0 was released in December 2013. This is the second IIB Industry Pack which we have brought to market and starts expanding the strategy which was laid down with the WMB Healthcare Connectivity Pack which itself has had two major market releases since its inception in May 2011.

The Retail Pack provides development accelerators to assist with retail integration both in stores and in the enterprise. The pack provides two patterns and a new Web User Interface.

The first pattern provides some pre-built integration flows which are functionally equivalent to the support previously offered by the WebSphere Commerce Feature Pack 5 mediation modules for WESB. With IIB now adopting the WESB use case, this pattern in the IIB Retail Pack forms IBMs strategic integration solution for exchange of data between WCS and SOM.

The second pattern, converts ACE Tlog data into the POSLog XML canonical format. Several variants of the Tlog standard are supported Binary, XML and MIME. Database scripts and a sample message flow are also included for the creation of a database which conforms to the ARTS Operational Data Model. The sample message flow uses a Graphical Mapping node to insert data originating from a Point of Sale into the ARTS database.

The Web User Interface is built upon the existing IIB technology stack (IIBs REST API, web security model and cutdown Tomcat implementation) but provides a distinct context root /retail with a splash page and links which are specific to the pack. The UI offers both a Business view and an Operational view. The Business view tracks the total revenue recorded across an aggregation of POSLog messages from Point of Sale devices in store. This can be used by a store manager through the trading day to track sales with a Point of Sale breakdown, or in the Enterprise to track and compare individual stores at different geographic locations. Built upon IIB Accounting & Statistics and IIB Monitoring publications, the Web UI uses a flow of information into a web socket connection in order to provide a real-time view of performance of the Tlog to POSLog pattern. The operational view groups together a set of flows based on a Pattern Type and Pattern identifier. The throughput of messages through each flow, and the time interval at which the last message was transmitted are displayed. This operational view provides at-a-glance an indication of how the flows which make up a pattern are performing. For example in combination with the WebSphere Commerce to Sterling Order Management pattern, it can be used to track several disparate flows each of which would expect data at wildly varying frequencies (heartbeat pings versus orders flowing etc.)

Whats new in IIB Healthcare Pack v3.0

IIB Healthcare Pack v3.0 released in March 2014

3rd release building on top of existing functions including HL7 connectivity, DICOM, ATNA, MedicalDevice connectivity and Data Analysis Profiles

SP_Picto_Black_Healthcare_Monitor2SP_Picto_Black_General_PersonSP_Picto_Black_Technology_SmartPhoneSP_Picto_Black_Healthcare_HealthcareWorkerSP_Picto_Black_General_House

New Web User Interface

Clinical Application monitoring

Operational views to understand flow activity

HL7 Transformation Pattern

Generates graphical data maps for creation of HL7 messages from scratch

Assigns for individual fields in the MSH

HL7 Error handling enhancments

Home Health Pattern

Generates message flows to support a WAN interface

SOAP/HTTP interface using the IHE industry standard CommunicatePCDData WSDL

Security PEP node for SAML Token security (with external STS)

Mapping solution for all 3 forms of acknowledgement

The IIB Healthcare pack v3.0 continues our commitment to support core healthcare integration scenarios requiring HL7 data. Often, clinical applications will claim to use data compliant with the HL7 messaging standard but in reality produce and consume messages which do not quite match with the standard. The HL7 Error handling enhancements make it much easier to catch these kinds of situations and therefore make changes to the supplied HL7 DFDL model. The HL7 Transformation Pattern also aids IIB developers in creating message flows which interact with HL7 data structures by automatically generating graphical data maps (or ESQL) which create a logical tree structure for an HL7 message (or HL7 segment) from scratch. HL7 messages often contain thousands of fields, so this really helps speed up the development effort required in this area.

The healthcare packs new Web User Interface provides a view of connected clinical applications for tracking the sending, receiving and acknowledging of HL7 / MLLP data exchanged between healthcare applications using TCP socket connections. This view is equivalent to the MBX eclipse based view which users may be familiar with from previous releases. The Web User interface also offers some operational views which show the user how the flows which make up particular healthcare pack patterns are performing.

The Home Health pattern, symbolised by the pictograms in the green rectangle and the component diagram show that IIB can be used in the role of WAN receiver to take data which is sent as an embedded HL7 Observation Result message within a SOAP body into a message flow. This pattern utilises an industry standard WSDL document published by the Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise group, and then re-used in the Continua Alliance Design Guidelines. These guidelines also suggest using SAML security tokens to ensure that the message is sent from an authorised source. The IIB Security PEP (Policy Enforcement Point) node to check this token with an external Token Service (such as Tivoli Federated Identity Manager for example). The generated flow which the pattern creates also provides graphical data maps for the creation of the correct form of acknowledgement message to be sent back to the requesting Application Hosting Device (typically mobile phone). These acknowlegement messages can take one of three formats successful acceptance and processing of the observation result, rejection of the observation result, or another form of rejection due to a first acceptance that the observation result was ok but that a downstream problem was encountered.

Manufacturing and IBM Integration Bus

Statements regarding IBM plans, directions, and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice at IBM's sole discretion. Information regarding potential future products is intended to outline our general product direction and it should not be relied on in making a purchasing decision. The information mentioned regarding potential future products is not a commitment, promise, or legal obligation to deliver any material, code, or functionality. Information about potential future products may not be incorporated into any contract. The development, release, and timing of any future features or functionality described for our products remains at our sole discretion.

IIB and Manufacturing

Statement of Direction released on 22nd April 2014

Plant Connectivity De Facto Standards

Connectors and patterns that support current OPC industry standards for integration of plant and machinery data and events, including a small number of vendor-specific implementations

Plant Connectivity Emerging Standards

Support for emerging OPC Unified Architecture standards to allow broader integration to the enterprise

Enterprise Connectivity

Integrations and connectors, including MQ Telemetry Transport (MQTT), which facilitate the transmission of data from remote locations

Web-based interface to provide operational views of data published from plant and machinery

http://www-01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-bin/ssialias?infotype=AN&subtype=CA&htmlfid=897/ENUS214-212&appname=USN

On Tuesday 22nd April 2014 IBM made a public Statement of Direction regarding our future intention to deliver a Manufacturing Pack to extend the industry specific capabilities of IBM Integration Bus. The planned capabilities for the Pack will provide ready-to-use connectivity patterns to help save time for integrators seeking to integrate a range of plant and machinery data and events from the production, manufacturing and industrial sectors.

It is our intention to focus the efforts of the Pack in three main areas support for Plant connectivity via existing de facto standards, support for Plant connectivity via new and emerging OPC Unified Architecture standards, and in the area of Enterprise Connectivity with connectors to facilitate the transmission of data from remote locations. Like other Industry packs which IBM has already released, a Web-based interface for the provision of operational views of the data published from plant and machinery is also planned. More on this in a moment, but first lets consider some of the business drivers in this area

The announcement, reflects the importance of Manufacturing clients to the future reach of the IBM Integration Bus. There are several business imperatives which are driving this excellent market opportunity. Increased expectations from clients are driving the manufacturing world away from just Mass Automation but to Mass Customisation. When I order my premium car from my local dealership, Im expecting regular updates from the production center telling me when the parts have arrived, what stage the assembly is at, and how my delivery date is changing (is the car ahead or behind predicted schedule?). The cultural demands from users now accustomed to interactions on the web and social media mean that it is no longer good enough for a Manufacturer of premium goods to ignore this aspect of their operations. The importance of capturing the green dollar (climate and eco-sensitive consumers) cannot be underestimated. The ability for a client to track the raw materials which have been combined to produce their product has real influence on peoples buying decisions. As we emerge from global economic recessions, the growth of the Manufacturing sector as a whole is also driving demand the impact of the BRIC and MINT economies and their emergent middle classes is driving new opportunities. Existing players cannot afford to be complacent with the globalisation of supply chains, and global competition with lower labour costs.

Company internal processes are also driving an integration need in this business space Increased resoure efficiency can be achieved by scheduling production processes for optimal use of resources and machine time. Production line performance analysis is required, measures of equipment effectiveness and the ability to perform predictive maintenance. Increased competition in the manufacturing sector means that companies also need to become increasingly dynamic highly responsive to changes in demand using re-configurable production facilities.

A closed Early Access Program has also been instantiated, which clients can register for through their IBM Sales and Account representatives. The announcement of the program happened in the second week of April, and we are currently gathering nominations for a kick off call in the second week of May, to be shortly followed by a Beta Code Drop.

The slide shows some of the connectivity areas which we are expecting to pursue:

Plant Connectivity De Facto standards: OPC Classic support built on the Windows COM and DCOM communication technologies.OPC Unified Architecture: The future of non-proprietary Open Process Communications supporting all the data exchanges provided with the OPC Classic Data Access capabilities but built upon SOA principles, including enhanced security.Vendor specific: We are exploring OSIsoft PI Server integration. PI Server is the market leading OPC Server. Founded in 1980 in California, with current revenue levels of approx $270million, OSIsoft now has in excess of 15,000 customer installations spread across more than 110 countries. Enterprise Connectivity: MQTT for remote site connections.

Service Management & Governance

WebSphere Service Registry and Repository v8.5

Action drop-down menu

Google-style search

Collection filters

Email owner

Service catalog view

Download service definition

New in v8.5

New in v8.5

New in v8.5

New in v8.5

New in v8.5

New in v8.5

Email Consumers

New in v8.5

Managing the dashboard

Service endpoint protection

Controlling consumption

Endpoint routing

Control - Workload Management Policy Author and attach workload management policies to control IBM Integration Bus flows at runtime

New in v8.5

shows a service consumption visualizer widget

Browser

Browser

Browser

Browser

Fewer requests from browser to server, with more compression

More asynchronous requests

WSRR

WSRR v8.5

WSRR

WSRR v8.5

UI Performance Improvements

New in v8.5

APIs & Services
Some superficial differences

APIsSOATerminologyAPIsServices

Associated TechnologiesJSON, REST, HTTPWeb services, SOAP, XML

ApplicationsMobile apps-Web, Enterprise apps

yet many similar characteristicsRe-usableAbstraction of a repeatable taskComposableEncapsulates functionalityWell-defined interfacesGovernableShareable

Two similar worlds converging

Service Management API Management

Mainly about Services Mainly about APIs

Govern services through the lifecycleExpose APIs to the Web, manage them to prevent chaos in usage

Began with Web Services Began with REST

100s of services Smaller number of APIs

Typically internal, behind firewall External and Internal

Driven by Enterprise Architects Driven by Business, Marketing, Mobile teams, Innovation teams

Governs with a StickGoverns with a Carrot

Established market presenceNewer in market

Contracts enforced with ESBs and GatewaysSecurity and Entitlements controlled by Gateway

The overlap between SOA governance technology and API management is significant.

It is about tracking and monitoring the artifacts in an SOA or an API project, enforcing and ensuring compliance with the policies associated with the artifacts and measuring the outcomes related to their use.

- August 2013, Gartners Application Services Governance report

Application Services Governance

API ManagementSOA Governance

The Convergence Journey

Minimum disruption to the current user

Maximum Speed

Phase I in WSRR 8.5 & APIm v5Ability to see & select WSRR services through APIm Interface

Phase IIComing soon

Love to hear your views

Inner Circle CustomersThursday 9am Bellini 2104

Gartner recently introduced the term application services governance to refer to the union of SOA governance technology functionality and API management, thus preserving the terminology differences between the two, with the view that these aspects will eventually be unified.

- August 2013, Gartners Application Services Governance report

IBM in the Application Services Governance marketSource Gartner August 2013IBM in the Application Service Governance market2,000 customers

Largest engineering investment in the industry, with over 250 engineers

Over 200 field practitioners

Strong focus on security (no ability to run third-party code, hardware security, etc.), ease of use, and methodology

WSRR Sessions at Impact 2014

Client use case presentations

2089: Lessons Learned Using a Service Registry for Service Governance

Tuesday: 10:30 11:30 Palazzo F; Steve Romanowski (State Farm), Dennis Miller (IBM)

3358: How PSCU Implemented Its Intelligent Platform Through a SOA COE

Tuesday: 14:15 15:15 Marcello 4402; Prithvi Srinivasan (Prolifics)

1501: API Lifecycle Management: Integrating IBM WSRR & API Management

Wednesday : 10:30 11:30 Marcello 4402; John Falkl (Haddon Hill Group Associates)

2781: How CVS Caremark Implemented a Service Oriented Architecture Center of Excellence

Wednesday : 10:30 11:30 Marcello 4405; Prithvi Srinivasan (Prolifics), Ajay Behuria (CVS CareMark)

2740: Extending IBM WSRR to Legacy IBM WebSphere Application Server

Wednesday: 14:15 15:15 Marcello 4405; Animesh Jain (Prolifics)

2699: SOA at Highmark - One Company's Journey

Wednesday : 17:00 18:00 Lando 4305; Rich Turney (Highmark Inc.), Ed Ober (Highmark Inc.)

3128: Implementing an ESB with IBM Integration Solutions at Danske Bank

Wednesday : 17:00 18:00 Marcello 4404; John Alex Jensen (Danske Bank)

1540: Reusable Policy Templates in IBM WebSphere Service Registry and Repository

Thursday: 10:30 11:30 Palazzo F; Yevgen Khibin (Kaiser Permanente)

2946: SOA Best Practices & Pitfalls

Thursday : 15:45 16:45 Lido 3005; Rich Turney (Highmark Inc.), Ed Ober (Highmark Inc.), Chris Hengst (Highmark Inc.), Bryan Lichtenwalner (Highmark Inc.)

WSRR Sessions at Impact 2014

Product presentations

1250: Whats New in IBM WebSphere Service Registry and Repository

Tuesday : 10:30 11:30 Marcello 4405; Robert Laird (IBM), Nick Butler (IBM)

Wednesday: 15:45 16:45 Marcello 4405; Robert Laird (IBM), Nick Butler (IBM)

1200: IBM WSRR & IBM Integration Bus: Advanced Integration

Tuesday : 17:00 18:00 Palazzo I; Martin Smithson (IBM)

1251: Service Visibility & Management with IBM WebSphere Service Registry and Repository

Wednesday : 13:00 14:00 Marcello 4405; Robert Laird (IBM), Nick Butler (IBM)

3237: Meet the Experts: IBM WebSphere Service Registry and Repository

Thursday: 13:00 14:00 San Polo 3503; Nick Butler (IBM), Martin Smithson (IBM)

Roundtable Feedback Sessions

1244: Roundtable: IBM WebSphere Service Registry and Repository

Monday: 17:15 18:15 Zeno 4708; Robert Laird (IBM), Gary Thornton (IBM)

Tuesday: 17:00 18:00 Zeno 4708; Robert Laird (IBM), Gary Thornton (IBM)

Hands on labs

1223: Enable Role-based Service Views & Change Notification to Effectively Govern Services

Wednesday: 15:45 18:00 - Murano 3305; Martin Smithson (IBM), Dennis Miller (IBM)

1201: IBM WRR & IBM Integration Bus: Advanced Integration Lab

Thursday: 09:00 11:30 - Murano 3305; Martin Smithson (IBM), Dennis Miller (IBM)

API Management Sessions at IMPACT 2014

API Economy2569: Freedom to innovate through SOA & APIs

Mon 16:00 17:00 Marcello 4405; Thu10:30 11:30 Lando 4203

1339: API Management & Beyond: Introduction, Benefits, Use Cases & Approach, & Reference ArchitectureTue 10:30 11:30 Marcello 4402

1496: API Design Best PracticesTue 13:00 14:00 Marcello 4402

2509: Business of Internal APIs, by Kin Lane, The API EvangelistTue 13:00 14:00 Palazzo G

2739: Differentiating Between Web APIs, SOA, & Integration & Why It Matters to an Architecture Tue13:00 14:00 Palazzo P

1435: Defining a Business Strategy for APIs, by Mehdi Medjaoui (WebShell.io) Wed 13:00 14:00 Marcello 4402

2803:Skyrocketing Growth Through APIs: Think like a startup & scale like an enterprise

Jason Wolenik,(Fabernovel Inc), Elie Chevignard (OAuth.io)Wed 14:15 15: Marcello 4501 B

1504: The API Economy: Identify Opportunities for Monetizing Business Assets Wed17:00 18:00 Lido 3101 B

2356: Banking on APIsThu10:30 11:30 Marcello 4402

API and Mobile & API and IoT sessions1398: From Mobile to API: What Are the Security Implications (Part 1)Tue 14:15 15:15 Marcello 4501 B

1487: From Mobile to API: What Are the Security Implications (Part 2)Tue 15:45 16:45 Marcello 4501 B

3236: API First Mobile StrategyWed 10:30 11:30 Palazzo G

2520:IoT & API - Cant Spell "Internet of Things" Without A-P-IThu 14:1515:15 Marcello 4402.

Live Demo Session3512: IBM API Management v3 interactive demoWed 2:15 - 3:15; 3:45 - 4:45 Delfino 4103

API Management Sessions at IMPACT 2014

Client use case sessions1513: Enterprise API Strategies from Customers & Implementers Panel

Monday 17:15 18:15 Lido 3005; Ren Srinivasan (Citi), Mehdi Medjaoui (WebShell.io),John Falkl (Haddon Hill Group), Jack Hunt (Availity, Inc.), Justin Falciola (Humana), Tim Hundt (GE Capital)

1401: Capitalizing on the API EconomyTuesday 13:00 14:00 Lando 4201A; Bob Evans (Pitney Bowes), Srikant Varadarajan (Pitney Bowes)

1890: Explore API Economy Through Joint Lab Building the Largest Internet of Vehicles Platform in ChinaTuesday 15:45 16:45 Marcello 4401 A; DaoSheng Hu (TransWiseway)

2165: Enabling IBM API Management at WestJet Airlines

Wednesday 10:30 11:30 Lando 4305; Kevin Minshull (WestJet Airlines), Erik Hope (WestJet Airlines)

Product sessions1434: IBM API Management - Overview & What's New LectureMonday 14:30 15:30 Palazzo G; Thursday 9:00 10:00 Palazzo G

1517: Extending Enterprise Integration with IBM API ManagementTuesday 14:15 15:15 Palazzo G

1501: API Lifecycle Management: Integrating WSRR & API Management

Wednesday 10:30 11:30 Marcello 4402

1630: Got CICS? Enter the API Economy with IBM API Management

Thursday 9:00 10:00 Delfino 4003

2913: API Management V3 Technical Overview & Deep DiveThursday 10:30 11:30 Marcello 4501 B; Thursday 13:00 14:00 Palazzo G

1080: Extending an Existing IBM WebSphere DataPower Return on Investment with IBM API Management

Thursday 13:00 14:00 Marcello 4501 B

1494: IBM API Management Best Practices: Setup, API Design, & DeploymentThursday 14:15 15:15 Marcello 4501 B

1325: IBM API Management User Experience Design & Feedback Customer FeedbackZeno 4701 - Monday 17:15 18:15; Tuesday 17:00 18:00; Wednesday 13:00 14:00

Questions?

We Value Your Feedback

Dont forget to submit your Impact session and speaker feedback! Your feedback is very important to us we use it to continually improve the conference.

Use the Conference Mobile App or the online Agenda Builder to quickly submit your survey

Navigate to Surveys to see a view of surveys for sessions youve attended

Thank You

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Legal Disclaimer

IBM Corporation 2014. All Rights Reserved.

The information contained in this publication is provided for informational purposes only. While efforts were made to verify the completeness and accuracy of the information contained in this publication, it is provided AS IS without warranty of any kind, express or implied. In addition, this information is based on IBMs current product plans and strategy, which are subject to change by IBM without notice. IBM shall not be responsible for any damages arising out of the use of, or otherwise related to, this publication or any other materials. Nothing contained in this publication is intended to, nor shall have the effect of, creating any warranties or representations from IBM or its suppliers or licensors, or altering the terms and conditions of the applicable license agreement governing the use of IBM software.

References in this presentation to IBM products, programs, or services do not imply that they will be available in all countries in which IBM operates. Product release dates and/or capabilities referenced in this presentation may change at any time at IBMs sole discretion based on market opportunities or other factors, and are not intended to be a commitment to future product or feature availability in any way. Nothing contained in these materials is intended to, nor shall have the effect of, stating or implying that any activities undertaken by you will result in any specific sales, revenue growth or other results.

If the text contains performance statistics or references to benchmarks, insert the following language; otherwise delete:
Performance is based on measurements and projections using standard IBM benchmarks in a controlled environment. The actual throughput or performance that any user will experience will vary depending upon many factors, including considerations such as the amount of multiprogramming in the user's job stream, the I/O configuration, the storage configuration, and the workload processed. Therefore, no assurance can be given that an individual user will achieve results similar to those stated here.

If the text includes any customer examples, please confirm we have prior written approval from such customer and insert the following language; otherwise delete:
All customer examples described are presented as illustrations of how those customers have used IBM products and the results they may have achieved. Actual environmental costs and performance characteristics may vary by customer.

Please review text for proper trademark attribution of IBM products. At first use, each product name must be the full name and include appropriate trademark symbols (e.g., IBM Lotus Sametime Unyte). Subsequent references can drop IBM but should include the proper branding (e.g., Lotus Sametime Gateway, or WebSphere Application Server). Please refer to http://www.ibm.com/legal/copytrade.shtml for guidance on which trademarks require the or symbol. Do not use abbreviations for IBM product names in your presentation. All product names must be used as adjectives rather than nouns. Please list all of the trademarks that you use in your presentation as follows; delete any not included in your presentation. IBM, the IBM logo, Lotus, Lotus Notes, Notes, Domino, Quickr, Sametime, WebSphere, UC2, PartnerWorld and Lotusphere are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both. Unyte is a trademark of WebDialogs, Inc., in the United States, other countries, or both.

If you reference Adobe in the text, please mark the first use and include the following; otherwise delete:
Adobe, the Adobe logo, PostScript, and the PostScript logo are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the United States, and/or other countries.

If you reference Java in the text, please mark the first use and include the following; otherwise delete:
Java and all Java-based trademarks are trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States, other countries, or both.

If you reference Microsoft and/or Windows in the text, please mark the first use and include the following, as applicable; otherwise delete:
Microsoft and Windows are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both.

If you reference Intel and/or any of the following Intel products in the text, please mark the first use and include those that you use as follows; otherwise delete:
Intel, Intel Centrino, Celeron, Intel Xeon, Intel SpeedStep, Itanium, and Pentium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.

If you reference UNIX in the text, please mark the first use and include the following; otherwise delete:
UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the United States and other countries.

If you reference Linux in your presentation, please mark the first use and include the following; otherwise delete:
Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States, other countries, or both. Other company, product, or service names may be trademarks or service marks of others.

If the text/graphics include screenshots, no actual IBM employee names may be used (even your own), if your screenshots include fictitious company names (e.g., Renovations, Zeta Bank, Acme) please update and insert the following; otherwise delete: All references to [insert fictitious company name] refer to a fictitious company and are used for illustration purposes only.

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