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Moofwd's mashups create enterprise apps

I’m finishing up a long week down here in Orlando, Fla., for CTIA 2011 and trying to digest all the information that I have taken in the last couple of days. It has been an extremely informative week, with meetings with the WiMax Forum and Ericsson as well as exploring the world of machine-to-machine computing — "the Internet of Things.”

Yet a good app-maker will always get my attention.

Enterprise applications for mobile devices are starting to gain traction. Yet the big players in the enterprise software game have not jumped to lock down the market, which has left an opening for start-ups to grab a slice of the action with innovative solutions. That could mean forward-facing consumer apps, data-driven subscriber apps or internal, employee-use functionality apps. If there is a specific function in your enterprise, potentially there is an app for that.

Enter Moofwd. The company, an enterprise application foundry, is working specifically to bring mashup app creation to large corporations and government.

What is it?

Moofwd mashes up enterprise data through existing IT architecture to create mobile applications for any ecosystem. The mashup can come from disparate sources, such as social media, application performance interfaces (APIs), databases, mainframes and legacy systems. Data can be hosted locally or in the cloud, and the Moofwd architecture will retrieve a request behind a firewall and bring relevant data to the app.

Moofwd can build applications across mobile operating systems, which can ease the burden of deployment in IT landscapes that are becoming increasingly diverse in mobile use.

What’s the buzz?

The company was selected by the Telecom Council of Silicon Valley to be in the Innovation Showcase at the CTIA Wireless 2011 convention. There is a clear market for enterprise application enablers, and Moofwd is a unique entrant into the field.

There are a variety of application mashup services out there, but all of them are focused on the consumer or small-business layer, such as Conduit, Didmo Magmito and appMobi. None of them focus on handling enterprise data and infrastructure the way Moofwd does. Until IBM, SAP or Oracle decides to get into enterprise apps with an easy-to-use solution (or just buys Moofwd), the company will retain an edge.

How do you pronounce it?

Why just like it's spelled, at least if you take abbreviations into account. It's pronounced "moo forward."

Why does government care?

Trends in federal IT:

Data. Data. Data.

Mobile. Mobile. Mobile.

There are, of course, more trends than just those, but data discoverability and mobile utility are among the important challenges facing agencies. The ability to create applications for both front-facing and internal environments is becoming increasingly important.

There are not a lot of agencies that employ dedicated app stores for mission-specific apps, and Moofwd can help to build application portfolios for different departmental use cases.

Why do I care?

At the ShowStoppers event at CTIA on Monday, I got a close look at some of the other application mashup services, such as Conduit and Didmo Magmito. When I pitched the idea of governmental use cases, data silos, firewall retrieval and authentication, I got blank stares. Once they recovered their senses they started giving me some PR-speak, but clearly the majority of this market is looking toward the consumer and small-business section. Moofwd is led by some smart folks out of Princeton, N.J., and approaches app development on an enterprise scale without flinching.

 

 

Posted by Dan Rowinski on Mar 24, 2011 at 11:14 AM


Reader Comments

Sun, Mar 27, 2011 Sachin Ahuja Princeton, NJ

@Emma - Full disclosure first, I am the CEO & Chief Architect of Moofwd. Just wanted to clarify this conversation a little - Presto is a good Enterprise Mashup tool, however, the Moofwd Convergence Platform has a lot more expanse and is specifically created to enable enterprise mobility. Although the Moofwd Enterprise Mashup Engine is at the center of our offering, it is just one part of a much larger picture. The platform is highly effective at mobilizing the mashups that we create using a bunch of other very effective and very necessary engines: the media transcoding engine, app provisioning engine, dyndin engine, the rich connected app runtime etc. Furthermore, if enterprises see value in Presto or any other mashup/integration product - Moofwd will enable mobilizing that too! The Moofwd Convergence Platform was created to be highly inclusive, and in that spirit Presto would be just another source system that we'll mashup into the platform. We are not interested in disrupting an IT team's investments, we are interested in helping them extract a greater value out of those investments and in mobilizing their processes. Finally, we are a very accessible organization, so feel free to connect with me (skype: moofwd) and I'll be more than happy to discuss this with you further.

Fri, Mar 25, 2011 Dan Rowinski

Emma -- That is a fair criticism. I do not want to come off as writing an ad for Moofwd but their architecture is very interesting. Presto is a similar mashup application but, to my knowledge, they are not mobile first. As this was written in the guise of the CTIA Wireless convention where JackBe did not have a presence, I left them out. Presto is very dynamic and extremely powerful and its applications can be used on mobile devices but sometimes I feel that it is almost an afterthought in their business plan.

Fri, Mar 25, 2011 Emma

How does this compare to JackBe's Presto software? It's also an enterprise mashup platform, and I see no mention of it. (The article sounds like an add for Moofwd, actually)

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