Mr. Chate is an innovative, yet pragmatic leader with a focus on enterprise software and services. He has consistently built and grown successful product and technology teams and delivered best in class results. His creative focus on envisioning how to use technology for collaboration and business innovation has established a record of delivering novel and superior results.
Mr. Chate’s work in the energy, consulting, securities and retail industries has provided a wide perspective on IT use in real world environments. Prior to joining Corent Technology, he pioneered information systems advances in leading companies including IBM, Oracle, Mercer, and TransCanada PipeLines.
You’ve built a single-‐tenant web-‐enabled application, but need to make it compatible with and effective in a cloud environment. What steps do you need to take to convert your application to a full-‐fledged, multi-‐tenant, cloud-‐ready SaaS application?
The authors take a sample web application, discuss the necessary considerations and alterations to make it a cloud winner, and outline the steps you need to take to get it there. Then, as a bonus, they demonstrate the software they’ve designed to provide a “plug-‐in” approach to multi-‐tenancy.
You've built a single-tenant web-enabled application, but need to make it compatible with and effective in a cloud environment. What steps do you need to take to convert your application to a full-fledged, multi-tenant, cloud-ready SaaS application? The author takes a sample web application, discusses the necessary considerations and alterations to make it a cloud winner, and outlines the steps you need to take to get it there. Then, as a bonus, he demonstrates the software his company has designed to provide a "plug-in" approach to multi-tenancy.
DeveloperWorks' Scott Laningham interviews Scott Chate of IBM Business Partner Corent Technology, Inc. about his company's use of IBM middleware offered through Amazon Web Services.
An overview of the industry evolution in providing enterprise information systems, and how the advances in technology are providing a pathway for new forms of delivery, and expanding the market. He stated that it should go in the "cost of software" section of book