In comparison to other tools such as Oracle, the price is good for the service we receive. The cost for the prediction instrument is high because it is charged per instances based on prediction, but the rest of the solution is free. For example, if you pay for two instances on prediction, then you have the right to use two instances on the document, test, or QA. Developer's licenses are under a separate payment plan.
The Community Edition is a full product you can use in production, it does not have limitations like other alternatives. For example, not including HTTPS on Mirth. Using the Enterprise edition is just required when I need Enterprise monitoring, on Enterprise deployments.
OpenESB exists in two editions. The Community Edition and the Enterprise Edition. The Community Edition is free of charge. The Enterprise Edition is dedicated to deployment on production and provides powerful monitoring and high scalability and comes with professional technical support. The licensing model is easy and is linked to the number of OpenESB instances in production. Instances for the other environments (pre-prod, test, QA.) are free and supported.
There are two versions. The first is the community version, which is free and contains the last part of the feature, but if you want to get the Enterprise version, you'll have to pay €60,000 which covers support and two instances on production. To clarify, with Enterprise, you're not paying for the license, you just pay for the support and you get the right to use the Enterprise version.
OpenESB is a Java-based open-source enterprise service bus. It can be used as a platform for both enterprise application integration and service-oriented architecture. OpenESB allows you to integrate legacy systems, external and internal partners and new development in your Business Process.
In comparison to other tools such as Oracle, the price is good for the service we receive. The cost for the prediction instrument is high because it is charged per instances based on prediction, but the rest of the solution is free. For example, if you pay for two instances on prediction, then you have the right to use two instances on the document, test, or QA. Developer's licenses are under a separate payment plan.
The Community Edition is a full product you can use in production, it does not have limitations like other alternatives. For example, not including HTTPS on Mirth. Using the Enterprise edition is just required when I need Enterprise monitoring, on Enterprise deployments.
OpenESB exists in two editions. The Community Edition and the Enterprise Edition. The Community Edition is free of charge. The Enterprise Edition is dedicated to deployment on production and provides powerful monitoring and high scalability and comes with professional technical support. The licensing model is easy and is linked to the number of OpenESB instances in production. Instances for the other environments (pre-prod, test, QA.) are free and supported.
There are two versions. The first is the community version, which is free and contains the last part of the feature, but if you want to get the Enterprise version, you'll have to pay €60,000 which covers support and two instances on production. To clarify, with Enterprise, you're not paying for the license, you just pay for the support and you get the right to use the Enterprise version.