Cape Clear (software company)

Cape Clear is a vendor of ESB (Enterprise service bus) software, founded in 1999.

Cape Clear was a spin-off from IONA Technologies.[1] and was a privately held firm with headquarters in San Mateo, California, US, and offices in Atlanta, Chicago, Denver and Waltham, US; Dublin, Ireland; and London, UK.

In November 2000, Cape Clear acquired Orbware[2][3][4]-a privately held UK-based software company founded in 1999 who were a Java EE licensee and whose OrCAS Enterprise Server product was a compact and high-performance implementation of the Enterprise JavaBean (EJB) and Java EE specifications.

Cape Clear made a final release of the OrCAS J2EE server product in February 2001[5] before the OrCAS product was merged with Cape Clear's CapeConnect XML integration server product. The combined product was named CapeConnect and was first released in April 2001 (Beta Release)[6] and May 2001 (Full Release)[7]

Cape Clear was identified as one of the leading ESB vendors by Forrester Research in July 2006.[8][9]

On 2008-02-06, Workday, Inc announced that it had reached a definitive agreement to purchase Cape Clear.[10][11]

Notes

gollark: I can tell you that my entry:- will be submitted- will be written in C or Python- will contain integers for at least the I/O part- will multiply square n * n matrices- will run in either less than, more than or equal to O(n²²¹¹³¹³¹³⁴) time and O((log n)⁶) space- may or may not invoke certain dark bee gods- will be compatible with Linux and potentially other OSes- could contain instances of SCP-3443- will be between (inclusive) 0KB and 20KB (main code file)- may utilize electromagnetic, logical or philosophical induction
gollark: Yes. You know how it is, one moment you're writing a reasonable program with comments and such but the next you accidentally start dropping in Greek identifier names, monoids, and stack frame meddling.
gollark: Reminder that osmarkslisp™ is in the public domain (because I say so and that is* how licensing works) and available here: https://github.com/osmarks/random-stuff/blob/master/list-sort.py
gollark: I don't actually know how to do variably sized 2D arrays; you can always convert them in your code.
gollark: It was determined that 2D arrays were "annoying" and "beelike".


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