Appcelerator was a mobile app development platform acquired by Axway in 2016. It has been discontinued.
N/A
Oracle BPM Suite
Score 8.5 out of 10
N/A
The Oracle Business Process Management Suite is an integrated environment for developing, administering, and using business applications centered around business processes.
N/A
Pricing
Appcelerator (discontinued)
Oracle BPM Suite
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Appcelerator (discontinued)
Oracle BPM Suite
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
—
—
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Appcelerator (discontinued)
Oracle BPM Suite
Features
Appcelerator (discontinued)
Oracle BPM Suite
Reporting & Analytics
Comparison of Reporting & Analytics features of Product A and Product B
Appcelerator (discontinued)
-
Ratings
Oracle BPM Suite
6.0
5 Ratings
26% below category average
Dashboards
00 Ratings
6.04 Ratings
Standard reports
00 Ratings
6.05 Ratings
Custom reports
00 Ratings
6.04 Ratings
Process Engine
Comparison of Process Engine features of Product A and Product B
Appcelerator (discontinued)
-
Ratings
Oracle BPM Suite
7.4
6 Ratings
12% below category average
Process designer
00 Ratings
8.06 Ratings
Process simulation
00 Ratings
7.06 Ratings
Business rules engine
00 Ratings
9.06 Ratings
SOA support
00 Ratings
8.06 Ratings
Process player
00 Ratings
8.05 Ratings
Support for modeling languages
00 Ratings
7.04 Ratings
Form builder
00 Ratings
4.05 Ratings
Model execution
00 Ratings
8.05 Ratings
Collaboration
Comparison of Collaboration features of Product A and Product B
Appcelerator (discontinued)
-
Ratings
Oracle BPM Suite
6.0
4 Ratings
33% below category average
Social collaboration tools
00 Ratings
6.04 Ratings
Content Management Capabilties
Comparison of Content Management Capabilties features of Product A and Product B
I do not think I can recommend Appcelerator at this point due to the issues with Appcelerator studio, lack of good debugging support, lack of thorough documentation and forums and the additional cost overhead of licenses. The pros are just that it allows for cross-platform development. However, Cordova does a much better job of it and excels at places where Appcelerator currently struggles
Oracle BPM is well suited to organizations and environments that have a good understanding of their business processes and organizational structures. Trying to introduce a tool such as Oracle BPM into the organization without a good grasp on how the business operates is a recipe for disaster as the implementation will uncover all of the dirty secrets of an organizations business processes and bring them to light. BPM is not to be utilized for smaller service orchestrations or technical service implementations, these should be handled by the Oracle SOA Suite using the BPEL process manager, leaving BPM to handle the organizational business processes, referring to and including lower level services and BPEL processes as needed.
It is very hard to debug your code. Breakpoints never worked for us even with the latest Appcelerator Studio and we had to rely on log statements to debug.
There is a need to purchase licenses from Appcelerator to run the code on a device or for creating iOS distribution builds. This is an additional cost when you have already paid for Apple developer program for precisely these things.
If things are broken due to lack to support between Appcelerator and a new iOS version, you pretty much have to rely on a new version release from Appcelerator for the issue to be fixed.
It is difficult to create enterprise distribution builds where the distribution certificate is owned by your organization's team and you only have a development certificate for the same.
The forums on developer.appcelerator.com are seldom helpful. It is hard to find solutions for issues even on other forums like stack overflow.
Oracle BPM is left behind by other tools more modern in terms of user experience, usability and ability to integrate with everything else.
To really harvest the potential of Oracle BPM you need to do it in JDeveloper and with ADF. This restricts its usage to very technical people.
The administration of the Oracle BPM tools has really put a burden on our team. It is running on Weblogic and we experience issues very often either with performance or with a bad configuration of the system.
As with all Oracle products, the price can be an issue for smaller shops.
Appcelerator makes you write a structured code whereas Cordova just packages your code and you are free to structure it. Appcelerator bridges your javascript code with native code and that would make it run faster than javascript code in Cordova apps. However, with recent mobile browsers, you would hardly notice any performance deterioration with Cordova apps. Appcelerator struggles with issues related to its IDE, debugging, documentation and forums and additional costs. Cordova makes it much more simpler to develop cross-platform apps with better developer support, debugging support, documentation and forums minus the additional costs.
We evaluated Bonita and found that it might fit a smaller-sized company better; we found that Oracle BPM Suite scaled much more evenly. We almost went with one of the competitors, but in the end chose Oracle BPM Suite after we factored in the cost of VMware licensing. There are literally tons of analytics on the back end which are great for upper management, but not so much for average users, but this fits our business model quite well.
We were able to build and deploy a mobile app with Appcelerator. However, the platform still has issues and does not cover our needs as much as some of its competitor like cordova does.
You'll most certainly need a deep dive and extensive training before your users can even think of using the product and they are very expensive.
Lack of documentation makes it very difficult to manage the application if any error is encountered which will result in you ending up hiring a dedicated person to look into the application once it's deployed.
For a very large org., if properly implemented and used, it can help identify the cost-intensive and inefficient processes.