Associate General Counsel at Wespath Benefits and Investments
User
2023-05-30T14:50:10Z
May 30, 2023
This is my personal opinion. Since you asked a couple of times, I'm sorry, I can't comment positively. I requested a trial and filled in the required web forms but the company never got back to me, nor have I seen the software so I have no idea other than communication isn't great based on this evidence.
I have used products from Borland, IBM Rational, Sparx, and native Eclipse before, also created my own domain-specific tools from Eclipse. I was thinking about buying a contemporary architecture tool for myself as a self-employed consultant and I had been trialing the latest tool from one of Abacus's rivals who offer a month's trial. Then I heard about Abacus so I thought to give them a try.
I'm doing some research work on ontologies, graph databases, and digital twins but I've found free tools to be the best in all honesty.
Storekeeper at a government with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2022-01-12T16:32:36Z
Jan 12, 2022
ABACUS is an Australian product that provides its users with the ability to model different types of enterprise architectural approaches, e.g. Zachman and more. They've got so many models within their product, that depending upon your expertise or experience, you can use this product to do BPM (business process management) modeling to various types of models, roadmaps, etc. It's an enterprise architecture platform.
Enterprise Architect at Enterprise Architecture Perspectives
Real User
2021-12-23T20:46:00Z
Dec 23, 2021
I'm a consultant, and it is used for making clients realize the capabilities of EA tools. There are not that many people using the tool right now. I use it as an example to get clients to be aware of what potential they have.
Enterprise Architect at Enterprise Architecture Perspectives
Real User
2020-11-17T01:49:53Z
Nov 17, 2020
I use the studio version, which is more of a desktop version as opposed to the enterprise version, which provides more of the analytics and intelligence capability.
Lead Enterprise Domain Architects at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
Top 5
2020-08-12T07:01:46Z
Aug 12, 2020
Our primary use case is for handling the enterprise architecture planning in the company. We are in banking debt processing. We are currently using it for handling the application domain architecture.
Enterprise Architect at Enterprise Architecture Perspectives
Real User
2020-03-09T08:07:52Z
Mar 9, 2020
When a client is looking for information on how to leverage an EA tool or how to look at the analysis that can come from an EA repository using the tool to create reports and dashboards, I can demonstrate that to them. I can demonstrate capabilities of what EA tools should be doing and how they should be doing it. Whether the client has a current tool in place or not, I can compare the information that needs to be gathered when you're documenting your architecture. Then I can tell the client that this is why the information is important to document. It may seem trivial or non-important at the time but it's important for later on because it allows for analysis and to do things such as project interdependencies reporting. This provides the ability to identify lags in the project delivery, where projects may depend on capabilities being in place but are not in place already. You will now have a lag for another project that is going to deliver early. It gives you things for capability overlaps, gaps, and standards.
Senior R&D Consultant at a tech services company with 201-500 employees
Consultant
2019-09-25T05:10:00Z
Sep 25, 2019
The primary use case for this solution is for our customers, but it's confidential so I cannot release that information. The deployment model we are using is on-premises.
I worked with this solution to access the code that other people had previously worked on. This included accessing the database to assess the methodology that people had used for development. In doing so, we had to evaluate some technical aspects of this solution. We worked with an on-premises deployment.
ABACUS is the enterprise architecture tool designed to have the quickest time-to-value. You can use it to build and maintain rich visual models from existing company data. ABACUS comes with standard industry frameworks as well as advanced analytic tools and best-in-class roadmapping and reporting functionality.
With Avolution ABACUS You Can:
Strategize and analyze your organizational architecture with ease using data-driven diagrams
Enjoy connected data, models, and metrics across your...
I am an integrator, integrating solutions for your client, a bank. It's used for enterprise architecture, mathematical design, and reports.
We use Avolution ABACUS for all of our enterprise architecture modeling and diagrams across all of our banks.
This is my personal opinion. Since you asked a couple of times, I'm sorry, I can't comment positively. I requested a trial and filled in the required web forms but the company never got back to me, nor have I seen the software so I have no idea other than communication isn't great based on this evidence.
I have used products from Borland, IBM Rational, Sparx, and native Eclipse before, also created my own domain-specific tools from Eclipse. I was thinking about buying a contemporary architecture tool for myself as a self-employed consultant and I had been trialing the latest tool from one of Abacus's rivals who offer a month's trial. Then I heard about Abacus so I thought to give them a try.
I'm doing some research work on ontologies, graph databases, and digital twins but I've found free tools to be the best in all honesty.
ABACUS is an Australian product that provides its users with the ability to model different types of enterprise architectural approaches, e.g. Zachman and more. They've got so many models within their product, that depending upon your expertise or experience, you can use this product to do BPM (business process management) modeling to various types of models, roadmaps, etc. It's an enterprise architecture platform.
I'm a consultant, and it is used for making clients realize the capabilities of EA tools. There are not that many people using the tool right now. I use it as an example to get clients to be aware of what potential they have.
I use the studio version, which is more of a desktop version as opposed to the enterprise version, which provides more of the analytics and intelligence capability.
Our primary use case is for handling the enterprise architecture planning in the company. We are in banking debt processing. We are currently using it for handling the application domain architecture.
When a client is looking for information on how to leverage an EA tool or how to look at the analysis that can come from an EA repository using the tool to create reports and dashboards, I can demonstrate that to them. I can demonstrate capabilities of what EA tools should be doing and how they should be doing it. Whether the client has a current tool in place or not, I can compare the information that needs to be gathered when you're documenting your architecture. Then I can tell the client that this is why the information is important to document. It may seem trivial or non-important at the time but it's important for later on because it allows for analysis and to do things such as project interdependencies reporting. This provides the ability to identify lags in the project delivery, where projects may depend on capabilities being in place but are not in place already. You will now have a lag for another project that is going to deliver early. It gives you things for capability overlaps, gaps, and standards.
The primary use case for this solution is for our customers, but it's confidential so I cannot release that information. The deployment model we are using is on-premises.
I worked with this solution to access the code that other people had previously worked on. This included accessing the database to assess the methodology that people had used for development. In doing so, we had to evaluate some technical aspects of this solution. We worked with an on-premises deployment.
We use the on-prem model. Our primary use is for enterprise architecture.