AppFog was a cloud-agnostic application and infrastructure management platform used to manage workloads across on-premises and third-party cloud environments. It has been discontinued.
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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.
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Pricing
AppFog (discontinued)
Oracle BPM Suite
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
AppFog (discontinued)
Oracle BPM Suite
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
Yes
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
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More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
AppFog (discontinued)
Oracle BPM Suite
Features
AppFog (discontinued)
Oracle BPM Suite
Platform-as-a-Service
Comparison of Platform-as-a-Service features of Product A and Product B
AppFog (discontinued)
6.5
2 Ratings
18% below category average
Oracle BPM Suite
-
Ratings
Ease of building user interfaces
7.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Scalability
5.32 Ratings
00 Ratings
Platform management overhead
6.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Workflow engine capability
6.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Platform access control
6.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Services-enabled integration
6.62 Ratings
00 Ratings
Development environment creation
7.42 Ratings
00 Ratings
Development environment replication
8.42 Ratings
00 Ratings
Issue monitoring and notification
6.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Issue recovery
6.42 Ratings
00 Ratings
Upgrades and platform fixes
7.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Reporting & Analytics
Comparison of Reporting & Analytics features of Product A and Product B
AppFog (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
AppFog (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
AppFog (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
It was very good to use in small scale projects. Considering the high end projects with many instances and multi-platform architectures, it is better to test before the application is deployed. I think few of the questions can be general - who are the system users and what size is the application focussing on? How much resources are required? Will the application require any additional services?
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.
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.
Primarily because it used to have a good free tier earlier, which it does not anymore. It's simple, and things are available to use. Compared to it's competitors, it does has less features, but that kind of acts in its favor. That adds to the simplicity, and ease of use for a new user.
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.
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.