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Interview Interview with Sanjay Manchanda of B-Bop
Interview with Sanjay Manchanda of B-Bop
By: XML News Desk
Dec. 21, 2000 12:00 AM
XML-J: What is your role as the chief marketing officer at B-Bop?
XML-J: Can you give our readers a brief introduction to what B-Bop does and how you started?
XML-J: B-Bop is an unusual name. Does it relate to your business in any way?
XML-J: I noticed that you recently joined OASIS. What role do you plan to play in this organization? How has your experience with OASIS been so far?
We've been able to reach the wider XML application community easily and effectively via OASIS and, at the same time, share ideas with fellow members.
XML-J: Describe XML and its impact on your niche in the computer industry.
B-Bop provides businesses with an innovative platform to easily write and deploy powerful new applications that use this new information model.
XML-J: The term 'XML Server' is overused in the XML industry. How would you describe an XML Server from your perspective?
At B-Bop we view an XML Server as a system that provides a complete set of management services to manage native XML, including the ability to provide native XML storage and retrieval. This is what allows applications and users to harness the real power of XML - its ability to define hierarchical relationships and provide precise control over information. An XML server must also provide a rich set of APIs to allow application developers to directly process XML. This eliminates the expense and development burden of creating custom, ad hoc programs to solve point problems when dealing with XML. In short, an XML Server provides a comprehensive framework for deploying robust, enterprise-scale, XML-based applications over the Web.
XML-J: Could you describe your product line?
XML-J: As an XML information management company how do you fit into an overall e-business solution? For example, how would your products complement/overlap with those provided by XML vendors like webMethods and Web application servers such as WebLogic or ATG Dynamo? Do you partner with any Web application server providers?
B-Bop's Xfinity is a full-blown XML management system, not an application server. It focuses on managing the XML content. Application servers such as WebLogic, WebSphere, and Dynamo are used as a platform for an application's business logic. Xfinity currently supports the Servlet API to allow easy integration with these systems. Trading partners use webMethods to integrate their business processes. All the messages and message envelopes that fly between the trading partners are XML documents. These XML documents are repeatedly mapped back and forth from relational schemas to XML, a costly and programmer-intensive process. B-Bop Xfinity can be used with webMethods products to solve the problem of managing these XML documents by storing them directly as XML, eliminating costly mapping and database redesign. As compliance issues make auditing and reporting a requirement, B-Bop Xfinity allows customers to query the actual XML documents used to automate the transaction using a native XML query language that allows powerful reporting capabilities. We're currently pursuing partnership opportunities.
XML-J: Who are your competitors in this market?
Most of our competition is from homegrown or custom solutions designed to solve point problems. For multitarget publishing applications we have competed successfully against Interleaf's BladeRunner product. For e-commerce applications our competitors would be Software AG's Tamino product and Excelon's object database, although we haven't encountered them yet.
XML-J: How do your offerings differ from your competitors? How do you plan to offer unique value in the e-business space?
B-Bop Xfinity also breaks the performance bottlenecks associated with retrieving and transforming XML content. Its rich set of APIs provides application developers with a robust platform that ensures easy development and fast deployment of XML-based applications. We offer unique value by delivering a comprehensive set of software services and tools to dramatically reduce the cost of development and shorten the time-to-market of such applications while allowing e-businesses to leverage their existing investments in IT.
XML-J: Your collateral states that your Xfinity Server is "the first platform that gives you native XML data management." Could you elaborate on that?
XML-J: The server obviously has to deal with XSL transformation issues. This is usually a major problem in developing XML applications. Have you done any work in abstracting XSL presentation from XML formatting?
To further simplify stylesheet development, we've developed a visual XSL design tool that allows a developer to create transformation stylesheets using drag-and-drop.
XML-J: Wireless seems to be the next big wave in high tech. Can you comment on XML's role in this industry? Does B-Bop plan to enter into this area? If so, how?
B-Bop Xfinity already provides the ability to render content into formats such as WML and HDML for many of today's widely used handheld and wireless devices.
XML-J: Nowadays almost every XML vendor is positioning itself as an "XML platform" company.
XML-J: Who are your biggest customers? How did they select you?
Both selected our product after careful evaluation of other potential solutions on the market and concluded that we had a truly unique solution to solve their XML data management problem. They were attracted by two things. First, the fact that our platform offered them a 'future-proof' solution, that is, it allowed them to rapidly adapt and evolve their applications as customer needs dictated without costly redesign; second, our completely standards-based approach that includes the ability to use an RDBMS for native XML storage and retrieval.
XML-J: How do your enterprise products scale? What type of solutions do you provide for high availability and fault tolerance?
Xfinity leverages the high-availability and fault-tolerance features of the UNIX and NT operating systems and the RDBMS.
XML-J: What are your plans for future expansion? Are you also going to ride the IPO wave?
XML-J: I noticed that B-Bop attended our XML DevCon this past summer. What do you think about SYS-CON's publications and conferences?
XML-J: What is the easiest way for our readers to start playing around with your products? Are there any evaluation copies available?
Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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