Vertical Route Works for IBM
Big Blue develops order management and messaging system for New York Stock Exchange and prepares to roll out health care solution.
IBM continues to push its vertical middleware strategy with new solutions for specific industriesand is winning deals that competitors can only envy. Customers can expect more this month, as IBM is expected to deliver a new health care solution using WebSphere Business Integration software as the core of the companys Health Care Collaborative Network Solution.Martin Wildberger, vice president of industry solutions at IBM and head of the companys Toronto Software Lab, is the brains behind IBMs industry-specific software solutions. Wildberger heads the development and delivery of more than 60 software bundles tailored to a dozen key industries. Since the rollout of these solutions earlier this year, more than 200 customers have implemented them, and more than 1,000 software developers have signed on to contribute to, sell and install the bundles in PartnerWorld Industry Networks, officials for the Armonk, N.Y., company said.
Click here to read more about the NYSEs new system.
NYSE officials said IBM is the prime contractor on the new system, known as TradeWorks, which includes IBM hardware, software and engineering, and consulting expertise to upgrade the NYSEs system for processing brokers buy-and-sell orders on the trading floor. "This system will increase the capability of floor brokers," said Roger Burkhardt, chief technology officer of the NYSE, in New York.
The system features thousands of custom-designed handheld devices that brokers can use on a wireless network to buy and sell orders.
The key to the deployment is the IBM middleware, including the companys DB2 database, WebSphere and Tivoli management software, which together act as the back-end engine for TradeWorks to process the transactions and manage the overall system. The DB2 system will run on IBM mainframes running z/OS. IBM is also supplying Linux workstations for traders and clerks to use.
Burkhardt said Securities Industry Automation Corp., in Brooklyn, N.Y., which helps develop the NYSEs key systems and networks, selected IBM as the primary partner for TradeWorks.
TradeWorks, which is in place and operating on the NYSE trading floor in a limited role, features a Java and Linux client for the brokers clerks, Burkhardt said. Willie Chiu, vice president of high-performance on-demand solutions at IBM, said the TradeWorks system involved "one of the most exhaustive tests we have ever done."
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