JackBe Corporation was a privately held vendor of enterprise mashup software for real-time intelligence applications. [1] In August 2013 JackBe was acquired by Software AG. [2] [3]
JackBe's flagship product is an enterprise mashup platform called Presto, which is used for enterprise mashups, business management dashboards, and real-time intelligence applications. [4]
JackBe’s main product, Presto, is an enterprise mashup platform. Presto provides real-time intelligence through functionality for self-service, on-demand data integration, and business dashboards. [5]
JackBe launched a cloud computing-based version of its Presto product in March 2010. [6] It is hosted on Amazon EC2. Jackbe launched Mashup Sites for SharePoint (MSS) in July 2010 [7] Jackbe announced an Enterprise App Depot in 2010, as a platform for creating internal application directories. [8] The Enterprise App Depot is aimed at non-developers (business users), allowing them to create new business applications and then share the applications with other users. [9] Industry analyst Joe McKendrick described the Enterprise App Store, as a "cool idea" on ZDNet. [10]
JackBe Corporation was a privately held vendor of enterprise mashup software for real-time intelligence applications. [1] In August 2013 JackBe was acquired by Software AG. [2] [3]
JackBe's flagship product is an enterprise mashup platform called Presto, which is used for enterprise mashups, business management dashboards, and real-time intelligence applications. [4]
JackBe’s main product, Presto, is an enterprise mashup platform. Presto provides real-time intelligence through functionality for self-service, on-demand data integration, and business dashboards. [5]
JackBe launched a cloud computing-based version of its Presto product in March 2010. [6] It is hosted on Amazon EC2. Jackbe launched Mashup Sites for SharePoint (MSS) in July 2010 [7] Jackbe announced an Enterprise App Depot in 2010, as a platform for creating internal application directories. [8] The Enterprise App Depot is aimed at non-developers (business users), allowing them to create new business applications and then share the applications with other users. [9] Industry analyst Joe McKendrick described the Enterprise App Store, as a "cool idea" on ZDNet. [10]