We use it to transform data, route data, and validate data. So, App Connect is an enterprise service bus (ESB), like Mule, Fuse, or Appian. This means it's really an enterprise service bus, and we use it for integration. We interconnect applications and protocols with App Connect.
Information Technology Product Manager at a manufacturing company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 10
2024-04-15T14:56:43Z
Apr 15, 2024
Our company has a big project for delivery and e-commerce sites. We use IBM App Connect to deliver information to our end users after they buy our products. We get information from many places, such as enterprise solutions and other applications. We send information and gather information from them to use in our web applications. We give our end users updates on the status of the products they bought from us.
We use IBM App Connect for business use cases involving data transformations. It can perform tasks such as converting XML to JSON, XML to CSV, or vice versa. Additionally, it can handle API conversions with mapping and transformation rules, simplifying the development process. It offers security features for APIs. It includes support for TLS (Transport Layer Security) and encryption mechanisms.
Head of ICT division at a energy/utilities company with 201-500 employees
Real User
Top 10
2023-05-15T13:36:57Z
May 15, 2023
We strategically decided to move all companies' data change with third parties. We control the Enterprise Service Bus platform. We also decided to change over to advanced systems to centralized management since we have several applications. We wanted a single point from which we could exchange data.
Student at a university with 1,001-5,000 employees
MSP
Top 20
2022-12-08T16:35:44Z
Dec 8, 2022
Our primary use cases mostly revolve around orchestrating information between different data stores and I would say different applications as well. So we would be storing it in the operational data stores or we will be sending the information as files in one of the nodes or we will be sending it for monitoring. So basically it is just moving information from one place to another or doing some validations on the information and then putting them into a database.
App Connect works as a middleware tool. It connects the front and the back ends. I've used it for creating a service for generating net banking OTPs. We are partners with IBM and I'm a senior software engineer.
We use the solution to integrate IR adaptors in SAP systems and Microsoft Graph APIs in SharePoint systems. We also use it for SFTP, STP, HTTP and REST endpoint files.
App Connect is useful for monitoring APAC and API. It allows us to do analysis based on the dashboards, and it's mostly used for security. We have almost 10 million transactions per day. It's a cloud solution.
Senior Associate Consultant at a tech services company with 5,001-10,000 employees
Reseller
2022-06-16T15:26:00Z
Jun 16, 2022
This is an integration product. Some of our financial customers, banks, and financial institutions are using IBM App Connect for integration and their services. We work with the banking clients' transaction processes included in their APIs. We work with payment transactions, cash flow, ATM services, ATM cards, and the Internet banking side.
Integration CoE Lead, Manufacturing, North America (Auto and Industrial) at Tata Consultancy Services
Real User
2020-07-16T21:43:08Z
Jul 16, 2020
IBM App Connect has two offerings. IBM App Connect Professional and IBM App Connect Enterprise (ACE). App Connect Professional is new version of IBM WebSphere Cast Iron which is basically a cloud enabler. It helps connect on-prem applications and systems with cloud based SaaS products. IBM ACE on the other hand is the new version of IBM Integration Bus which is IBM's advanced ESB.
Rapidly connect public clouds, private clouds and on-premises application
App Connect Professional is IBM’s cloud integration offering which delivers an integration solution• With ease-of-use, flexibility and increased responsiveness to the evolving business needs, while removing the daunting complexities of integration.• Provides the powerful combination of a ‘simple integration experience’ for business users looking to automate how their applications talk to each other; coupled with a...
I'm part of a significant communication company in Europe, and we primarily use IBM App Connect to integrate our CRM system.
We use it to transform data, route data, and validate data. So, App Connect is an enterprise service bus (ESB), like Mule, Fuse, or Appian. This means it's really an enterprise service bus, and we use it for integration. We interconnect applications and protocols with App Connect.
Our company has a big project for delivery and e-commerce sites. We use IBM App Connect to deliver information to our end users after they buy our products. We get information from many places, such as enterprise solutions and other applications. We send information and gather information from them to use in our web applications. We give our end users updates on the status of the products they bought from us.
We use the product mainly for the integration of enterprise applications.
We use IBM App Connect for business use cases involving data transformations. It can perform tasks such as converting XML to JSON, XML to CSV, or vice versa. Additionally, it can handle API conversions with mapping and transformation rules, simplifying the development process. It offers security features for APIs. It includes support for TLS (Transport Layer Security) and encryption mechanisms.
We strategically decided to move all companies' data change with third parties. We control the Enterprise Service Bus platform. We also decided to change over to advanced systems to centralized management since we have several applications. We wanted a single point from which we could exchange data.
I primarily use App Connect for ETL and managing files in batch operations.
Our primary use cases mostly revolve around orchestrating information between different data stores and I would say different applications as well. So we would be storing it in the operational data stores or we will be sending the information as files in one of the nodes or we will be sending it for monitoring. So basically it is just moving information from one place to another or doing some validations on the information and then putting them into a database.
App Connect works as a middleware tool. It connects the front and the back ends. I've used it for creating a service for generating net banking OTPs. We are partners with IBM and I'm a senior software engineer.
We use the solution to integrate IR adaptors in SAP systems and Microsoft Graph APIs in SharePoint systems. We also use it for SFTP, STP, HTTP and REST endpoint files.
App Connect is useful for monitoring APAC and API. It allows us to do analysis based on the dashboards, and it's mostly used for security. We have almost 10 million transactions per day. It's a cloud solution.
This is an integration product. Some of our financial customers, banks, and financial institutions are using IBM App Connect for integration and their services. We work with the banking clients' transaction processes included in their APIs. We work with payment transactions, cash flow, ATM services, ATM cards, and the Internet banking side.
We use App Connect for integration and creating APIs.
We use this solution to connect with MQ. We manage the solution and send the results.
This solution is used as the integration hub between the internal application of any enterprise.
IBM App Connect has two offerings. IBM App Connect Professional and IBM App Connect Enterprise (ACE). App Connect Professional is new version of IBM WebSphere Cast Iron which is basically a cloud enabler. It helps connect on-prem applications and systems with cloud based SaaS products. IBM ACE on the other hand is the new version of IBM Integration Bus which is IBM's advanced ESB.
We use it for the integration of applications in different scenarios.