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EMC, IBM and Microsoft Jointly Create First Web Services Interface Specification for Greater Interoperability of Enterprise Content Management Systems

Published date: 10 Sep 2008

Trio joined by Alfresco, Open Text, Oracle, and SAP in Development of

The Content Management Interoperability Services (CMIS) Specification

HOPKINTON, Mass., ARMONK, N.Y., and REDMOND, Wash., Sept. 10
/PRNewswire/ -- EMC Corporation (NYSE: EMC), IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Microsoft
Corp. (Nasdaq: MSFT) today announced a jointly developed specification
which uses Web Services and Web 2.0 interfaces to enable applications to
interoperate with multiple Enterprise Content Management (ECM) repositories
by different vendors. The companies intend to submit the Content Management
Interoperability Services specification to OASIS (Organization for the
Advancement of Structured Information Standards) for advancement through
its rigorous standards development process.

The ultimate goal of CMIS is to dramatically reduce the IT burden
around multi-vendor, multi-repository content management environments.
Currently, customers must spend valuable time and money to create and
maintain custom integration code and one-off integrations to get different
ECM systems within their organizations to "talk" to one another. The
specification will also benefit independent software vendors (ISVs) by
enabling them to create specialized applications that are capable of
running over a variety of content management systems.

Working together since late 2006, the three companies were joined in
the creation of the CMIS draft specification by other leading software
providers including: Alfresco Software, Open Text, Oracle and SAP. A final
gathering of all seven companies was recently held to validate
interoperability of the specification before submission to OASIS.

"Many companies today are struggling with how to unlock the full value
of their data when they have multiple content management solutions
dispersed throughout their organization. Currently, 'marrying' these into
one integrated system -- or migrating content between systems -- costs the
IT department a lot in time and money," said Melissa Webster, program vice
president, Content & Digital Media Technologies at IDC. "Given the need for
a common standard that will enable customers to access disparate
repositories, today's announcement certainly seems like a very positive
step in the right direction."

"For some time now the world of content management has been evolving
from separate application platforms to an integral part of a company's
information infrastructure," said Razmik Abnous, vice president and chief
technology officer, Content Management and Archiving Division at EMC. "As
content management rapidly becomes a key piece of a company's business
process, there's a heightened need for interoperability between the vast
and diverse sources that manage this content. Today's agreement is a major
step forward in achieving this goal."

"By working together to define the CMIS standard, IBM, Microsoft and
EMC are clearly putting the needs of all customers first in this important
technology area. We have worked hard to develop a standard that continues
IBM's efforts to leverage the principles of SOA and Web 2.0 interfaces to
benefit the industry as a whole," said Ken Bisconti, vice president,
products and strategy, IBM Enterprise Content Management.

"The real winner in today's announcement is the customer," said Jeff
Teper, corporate vice president of the Office Business Platform, Office
SharePoint Server Group at Microsoft. "Today's businesses are driven by
information. When companies operate in silos, with information scattered
throughout the enterprise, it becomes extremely difficult for customers to
realize its full value. By working together, we believe we can enable
customers to maximize the use of critical business assets."

Key to the new specification, EMC, IBM and Microsoft worked together to
define an interface that:

-- Is designed to work over existing repositories enabling customers to
build and leverage applications against multiple repositories --
unlocking content they already have
-- De-couples web services and content from the content management
repository, enabling customers to manage content independently
-- Provides common web services and Web 2.0 interfaces to dramatically
simplify application development
-- Is development platform and language agnostic
-- Supports composite application development and mash-ups by the business
or IT analyst
-- Grows the ISV and developer community

"We applaud EMC, IBM, and Microsoft for reaching this milestone and for
choosing to take the next step and advance this important work through an
open standards process," said Laurent Liscia, executive director of OASIS.
"We look forward to furthering the evolution of CMIS from specification to
standard and to promoting the broadest possible industry adoption through
education and implementation efforts."

For more information, and to download a preview copy of the CMIS
technical specification draft, please see the website of any of the
contributing companies: EMC Corporation (http://tinyurl.com/5wqwbn); IBM
(http://tinyurl.com/69u2jv); and Microsoft
(http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=127855). For information on
participating in the CMIS standardization work at OASIS, contact
member-services@oasis-open.org.

About EMC

EMC Corporation (NYSE: EMC) is the world's leading developer and
provider of information infrastructure technology and solutions that enable
organizations of all sizes to transform the way they compete and create
value from their information. Information about EMC's products and services
can be found at http://www.EMC.com.

About IBM

For more information on IBM's Enterprise Content Management offerings,
visit: http://www.ibm.com/software/ecm.

About Microsoft

Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq "MSFT") is the worldwide leader in
software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realize
their full potential.