FYI...

Some of this code is actually kinda cool and not just boring banking code.
It is also big news for CollabNet (my employer). :-)

I can't wait to "borrow" it for Turbine. :-)

-jon

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http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20010129/tc/banking_linux_dc_1.html

Monday January 29 8:42 PM ET
Dresdner Backs Linux-Based Software, a First
By Eric Auchard

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The investment banking arm of Germany's Dresdner
Bank AG has teamed up with Silicon Valley-based CollabNet to offer an
innovative system that thrusts Linux (news - web sites) software into
the heart of the banking world.
Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein on Tuesday plans to announce the new
software system based on Linux, Apache and other ``open source'' Web
software tools that could radically simplify and speed how corporate
clients move money within and among banks.
And in a move that would have once been considered an anathema to the
secretive banking world, Dresdner Kleinwort plans to freely release its
``openadaptor'' plumbing software to programmers in the wider ``open
source'' community.
``Open source'' refers to software that is developed, tested, or
improved through public collaboration and distributed with the idea that
it must be shared with others, ensuring an open future collaboration.
Dresdner officials said they had set up partnerships with two of the
world's three top investment banks to develop the system, known as
``openadaptor,'' for connecting disparate banking software and other
corporate information systems.
``All the large companies use multiple banks and the key to them is not
to be trapped or feel trapped'' into one software system, Al-Noor Ramji,
chief information officer at Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein, said in a
phone interview.
``If you make it easier and cheaper people tend to do more,'' Jonathan
Lindsell, another Dresdner executive, referring to the willingness to
trade more securities as the cost of transaction-handling declines.
Open source software marks a radical break with proprietary software in
which the fundamental code is owned by one company, such as Microsoft
Corp.'s flagship product, the Windows operating system, or UNIX software
offered by several firms.
Uses Latest Internet Programming Tools
In contrast to traditional private in-house systems or banking industry
software standards, openadaptor takes advantage of the latest Internet
programming tools.
The system allows Dresdner software developers to team up with outside
programmers at other banks or in the Linux development world at large
via a programming site managed by CollabNet.
Open source software advocates believe the intellectual collaboration of
minds will improve the software for all involved. Individual developers
or companies are in turn free to tailor specific versions for their own
organization's uses.
Openadaptor will allow any system that can be connected to the Internet
to communicate and link with other systems, Dresdner said. Companies can
plug together their own internal systems as with those from other
companies -- their suppliers, business partners or customers over the
Internet.
``Enabling our clients to interact on the Web with anyone they choose
will not only increase market transparency and liquidity; it will reduce
costs and increase business for all,'' Ramji said in a statement to be
released on Tuesday.
``We therefore have to take fundamentally important steps such as
speeding up connectivity for all our clients even at the so-called
expense of helping our competitors,'' he said.
Openadaptor is built on the open source development system from
CollabNet, a Brisbane, Calif. company founded by Brian Behlendorf, a
pioneer in the development of Apache software, one of the most popular
tools used to run Web-based computers.
CollabNet's system, known as SourceCast, allows programmers to work
together via the Internet, whether or not they are actually employed by
the same firm.
CollabNet is backed by a high-powered list of venture capitalists, banks
and corporate partners including Intel Corp. , Sun Microsystems, Oracle
Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co. and Dell Computer Corp. as well as Netscape
co-founder Marc Andreessen.
To date it has announced software development projects with Sun,
Hewlett-Packard, Oracle and Progress Software, among others.





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