IBM Autonomic Integrated Development Environment
A set of tools for creating Web Services Distributed Management (WSDM)-compliant interfaces for managed resources.
Date Posted: December 8, 2005
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Update: April 4, 2006
New version includes several new features and enhancements in both the run-time environment and the Eclipse-based tools (see FAQ for details).
This project has been donated to open source. It was part of two releases of Eclipse Test and Performance Tools Platform (TPTP) and now has been moved to the Eclipse Community Systems Management in Open Source (COSMOS) project.
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|  | About the technology author(s): The AIDE project includes members of the IBM Autonomic Computing, IBM Emerging Technologies, and IBM Research teams:
- Mark Weitzel, an architect in Tivoli's Autonomic Computing (AC) group, focuses on Web Services Distributed Management. In addition to articles published on developerWorks, Mr. Weitzel co-authored Enterprise Java Programming with WebSphere, Second Edition.
- Balan Subramanian, the development lead for AIDE, is a software engineer on IBM's AC team in Research Triangle Park (RTP), N.C. He was previously involved in event management technologies. Mr. Subramanian has published several AC-related articles and papers on developerWorks and at conferences.
- Dan Jemiolo, a software engineer on IBM's AC team in RTP, N.C., focuses on the creation of developer tools that help IBM's partners and customers build autonomic systems.
- Andrew Eberbach is a key developer on the AC team in RTP, N.C. His focus is on WSDM-related tools. Previously, as an IBM Extreme Blue intern, he worked on the Autonomic Task Manager for Administrators.
- Arun Shivaswamy, a lead developer in the India Software Lab (ISL), focuses on specialized, Eclipse-based editors for integrated tools centered around the WSDM specification and autonomic computing.
- Shajeer K Mohammed, an advisory software engineer at ISL, has designed, developed, and maintained systems management applications and worked with IBM Tivoli Monitoring. Currently he provides support to worldwide users on the IBM Autonomic Computing Toolkit.
- Saurabh Dravid, a software developer at ISL, provides specialized tools and solutions for autonomic computing.
- Ed Snible is a software engineer at the T. J. Watson Research Center, Hawthorne, N.Y. Before working in server-side Java, Mr. Snible developed multimedia applets. He was part of the team that developed IBM's award-winning HotMedia player.
- Bill Arnold is a member of IBM Research in Hawthorne, N.Y. His expertise beyond autonomic computing includes computer viruses and defenses against them.
- Jim Hanson, Ph.D., is a research staff member at the IBM T. J. Watson Research Center. His research interests include software agents, simulation and analysis of complex systems, and emergent phenomena in distributed computation.
- Humberto Gutierrez-Rivas, of the AC Human Factors team, works on principles of interface design and graphical and network user interfaces.
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