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OS/2 Shareware BBS: 16 Announce
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1993-12-20
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INDUSTRY LEADERS FORM COMPONENT INTEGRATION LABORATORIES
TO DELIVER SOFTWARE INTEROPERABILITY
Apple, IBM, Novell, Oracle, Taligent, WordPerfect, and Xerox to Speed
Development of ╥Plug and Play╙ Software Interoperability Across Multiple
Computer Platforms
SANTA CLARA, California╤September 16, 1993╤In an effort to create a common
framework for interoperability between applications on all desktop platforms,
seven industry-leading hardware, software, and networking companies have united
to form the Component Integration Laboratories (CIL). Apple Computer, Inc.,
IBM, Novell, Oracle, Taligent, WordPerfect Corporation, and Xerox Corporation
participated in the announcement made today at the Windows Solutions Conference
here.
The purpose of CIL is to establish, promote, and certify specifications and
reference implementations of key technologies that integrate information and
media from many applications within a networked environment. It is intended to
develop certification processes for software products that conform to CIL
specifications and documentation, as well as training for developers who want
to use CIL technologies. In addition, CIL will serve as a distribution center
for contributed software, design discussions and technology definition and
evolution.
CIL technology is designed to fundamentally change the way a user works with a
computer, evolving the focus from application-centered to document-centered
computing. This new architecture allows users to embed feature sets from
different applications into a single working document so that essential editing
tools are always quickly accessible. Users will be able to integrate
multimedia, three-dimensional models, text, graphics, and other types of
information in any application.
╥When end-users can access information they need from across an entire
enterprise, they will achieve extraordinary gains in productivity,╙ said Dennis
Andrews, president of the XSoft division of Xerox. ╥Xerox╒s commitment to the
document as the basis for information sharing and decision making leads us to
understand the importance of early participation of CIL. We believe our current
and future document management applications will take significant advantage of
the CIL APIs.╙
Even though CIL is a newly formed organization, members will have immediate
access to software architectures that have been completed. Initial CIL
technology will include the following:
Ñ The OpenDoc software architecture for Windows, OS/2, Macintosh and UNIX
to enable embedding of features from different applications into a single
working document.
Ñ Bento for the storage and interchange of multimedia information.
Ñ The Open Scripting Architecture (OSA) for the coexistence of multiple
scripting systems.
Ñ IBM╒s System Object Model (SOM) architecture, a highly efficient platform and
language-independent runtime mechanism for dynamic object linking.
╥OpenDoc is an exciting foundation that allows developers to move their
existing applications to the compound document world, and provides
interoperability across Macintosh, OS/2, DOS, Windows and UNIX operating
systems," said David Nagel, senior vice president and general manager of
Apple's AppleSoft division. "As well, OpenDoc will interoperate with Talent╒s
new object-oriented operating environment, assuring a smooth path between
OpenDoc and Taligent electronic documents.╙
╥CIL is the outgrowth of individual vendors╒ efforts toward the development of
compound documents, scripting and automation interfaces and standards for
object interfaces," said Cliff Reeves, director of Object Systems, from IBM's
Personal Software Products (PSP) division . "We see joining CIL and
contributing the SOM technology as an opportunity to leverage and speed this
development cycle.╙
╥We support the goals of CIL and plan to ensure interoperability of its
technologies with the Taligent environment,╙ said Michael Potel, vice president
of technology development at Taligent. ╥We believe CIL technologies are an
important step for migrating existing applications to a compound document
architecture. Interoperability will ease the migration from today╒s procedural
applications to tomorrow's object-oriented solutions on the Taligent platform.╙
Developers writing to the association╒s specifications will be able to create
plug-and-play applications that can be partitioned into independent components.
As part of CIL, they will receive early access to leading-edge technology,
training, co-marketing and technical support. Once their products are ready
for market, they can be tested and certified by CIL indicating that they meet
the software integration standards adopted by industry members. As members,
developers will be able to upgrade and migrate their products as the interface
standards evolve.
╥CIL technology provides a new business model for software developers by
letting them exploit their development strengths to bring products to market
more quickly, without spending cycles and resources recreating existing
software,╙ said Jed Harris, Apple╒s manager of Component Software Alliance
Strategy. ╥It opens the door for developers to create profitable market niches
while decreasing investment risks.╙
╥CIL technology is ideal for midsized companies with internal developers who
create and manage applications and tools for component integration. These
developers traditionally lack resources to develop the complete technology. At
the same time, they are getting tremendous demand from the end-user for
increased function and interoperability,╙ said Layne Cannon, director of
advanced technologies for WordPerfect Corporation.
Cannon continued, ╥WordPerfect Corporation╒s large installed base of small,
midsized and large enterprises, as well as strength and experience in the
Windows environment, brings immediate cross-platform expertise to CIL.╙
Bento, the Open Scripting architecture, and SOM are currently available from
Apple and IBM and will be made available to members. For more information
regarding membership, contact the Component Integration Laboratories at (415)
750-8352.
The Components Integration Laboratory, based in San Francisco, Calif., is a
non-profit association dedicated to software plug-and-play interoperability
across multiple computer platforms and applications.
-30-
Apple and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.