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MacRobert Award
2004 Winner
IBM
British
engineers at global IT giant IBM have won
the Royal Academy of Engineering MacRobert
Award for an innovation that most people
have never come across.
WebSphere MQ software
has helped businesses save billions of
dollars by providing a failsafe means of
exchanging business-critical information
between computer systems, irrespective of
their location and regardless of whatever
hardware, programming language, operating
system or communication protocol they use.
WebSphere’s
development team, from IBM’s Hursley
Laboratory near Winchester, received the
MacRobert Gold Medal and £50,000 prize in
London last night from HRH Prince Philip,
Duke of Edinburgh, at the Academy’s Awards
Dinner, beating off stiff competition from
Pilkington’s self-cleaning windows, Sharp’s
3D displays and Delphi Diesel’s
emission-busting injection systems.
“Without WebSphere MQ
we might never have enjoyed the full
benefits of the e-commerce revolution,” says
Dr Robin Paul FREng, Chairman of the
MacRobert Award Judging Panel. “When you
realise how many IT systems have to talk to
each other when, for example, you check your
balance and transfer funds online you really
start to appreciate the value of this
innovation. By enabling seamless
communications between computers, the
engineers at Hursley have effectively
created the oil that now keeps the world’s
e-commerce machine running.”
WebSphere MQ was
conceived at a time when organisations
realised they were becoming totally
dependent on a proliferation of
incompatible, non-communicating information
systems. Whilst the IT suppliers promoted
replacement, upgrade or integration, Dr Tony
Storey FREng and Tim Holloway came up with
the simple – but heretical – idea that the
right solution was to connect existing
systems.
Launched in 1994,
WebSphere MQ integrates servers, back office
systems and databases, reliably handling
hundreds of millions of messages every day.
But, like all simple ideas, WebSphere MQ was
not easy to implement and the development
team faced huge challenges along the way.
These included having to support 40
different computing platforms, filing over
120 patents as well as having to transfer
the original system to the Internet. But
they did this successfully – and continue to
improve it – such that WebSphere MQ is now
an essential part of the mainstream
infrastructure for over 10,000 customers,
including more than 80 per cent of companies
in the Fortune 100.
“We are delighted that
the IBM WebSphere software family has been
honoured with this prestigious award by the
Royal Academy of Engineering,” says Graham
Spittle, Hursley Laboratory Director and
IBM’s Vice President, Business Integration
Development. “WebSphere MQ is one of the
most important and successful distributed
system technologies in the industry today,
and we are proud that this achievement was
initiated by a UK team. This award
recognises the importance of software as an
engineering discipline in its own right, as
much as it recognises the success of IBM
WebSphere MQ. The MacRobert Award is an
indication of the maturity of the industry
and recognition of the significance of the
role IT plays in the modern world.”
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