Red Hat JBoss SOA Platform drives business execution, responsiveness, and flexibility in an open platform. It delivers what the vendor describes as an easy-to-consume service-oriented architecture (SOA) integration suite that lets users build, deploy, integrate, and orchestrate applications and services.
N/A
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
Score 9.0 out of 10
N/A
Talend Open Studio was an open source integration software, used to build basic data pipelines or execute simple ETL and data integration tasks. Qlik and Talend discontinued the service in early 2024, and it is no longer available.
$0
per month
Pricing
JBoss SOA Platform
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
JBoss SOA Platform
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
Yes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
—
—
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
JBoss SOA Platform
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
Features
JBoss SOA Platform
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
SOA Governance
Comparison of SOA Governance features of Product A and Product B
JBoss SOA Platform
7.6
1 Ratings
13% above category average
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
-
Ratings
Service registry
7.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Service management
6.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Service discovery
7.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Dependency management
9.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Policy management
9.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Data Source Connection
Comparison of Data Source Connection features of Product A and Product B
JBoss SOA Platform
-
Ratings
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
7.5
10 Ratings
10% below category average
Connect to traditional data sources
00 Ratings
7.010 Ratings
Connecto to Big Data and NoSQL
00 Ratings
7.99 Ratings
Data Transformations
Comparison of Data Transformations features of Product A and Product B
JBoss SOA Platform
-
Ratings
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
7.0
10 Ratings
15% below category average
Simple transformations
00 Ratings
6.010 Ratings
Complex transformations
00 Ratings
7.910 Ratings
Data Modeling
Comparison of Data Modeling features of Product A and Product B
JBoss SOA Platform
-
Ratings
Talend Open Studio (discontinued)
7.5
10 Ratings
5% below category average
Data model creation
00 Ratings
6.99 Ratings
Metadata management
00 Ratings
7.99 Ratings
Business rules and workflow
00 Ratings
6.98 Ratings
Collaboration
00 Ratings
7.07 Ratings
Testing and debugging
00 Ratings
8.910 Ratings
Data Governance
Comparison of Data Governance features of Product A and Product B
JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform is great when you are looking at building more or less pure Java applications and SOA micro-services that may integrate with multiple external data sources. It is less useful when you are looking to build simple SOA applications that are simple in nature since the overhead associated with deploying as well as learning BPEL.
For quick daily integrations Talend is a very good tool and it makes development time so short and easy. Citizen developers who are not great programmers can pick up and start using Talend Open Studio within weeks. It's well suited for all kinds of data migration between various systems. It is less appropriate for smaller synchronous services where you need to trace the complete transaction and how data moved between them. It's also less appropriate for small data movements where other tools can be easier to use and manage.
JBoss is open source so the cost overhead to deploy and build application is very low.
JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform and its parent Redhat are reputed and well adapted in the industry so it is easy to find best practices documentation for complex deployments of JBoss middleware.
JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform is dependent and build for JEE/Java application so using a different programming paradigm will be much harder.
There is still a learning curve to get familiar with BPEL making it harder to get an SOA micro-service up and running compared to a fully cloud-based service
The community is not that up to date and forum is not that great in response. Probably we should make people aware of the tool more on how to use and its implementations.
Talend crashes when transforming a lot of data (millions of rows).
Proper training documentation is a must for talend which is currently lagging. This will help users to learn more about Talend and use it effectively.
There is no licence requirement for Talend Open Studio. So, this is not relevant question. However, if you are asking whether we will use Talend in future. Yes. We will continue to use it. It's very powerful free tool which caters to all our extra, transform, load capabilities. We just love Talend for it's great functionality and ease of use.
Talend Open Studio is based on Eclipse and is full of redundant procedures to do one thing, like when installing libraries. Sometimes I cannot manually download the libraries that it can't find.
Many times, Talend freezes. When you give a cancel command, it takes several minutes to stop. It also takes a great toll on our PC with 16 GB of ram and I7 CPU, even in idle status. If you are downloading Maven Jar/Libraries, you cannot do anything and have to wait until the task is finished.
Redhat support generally is great and that is true for the JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform as well. Even if you do not buy support from Redhat, you can reply on the discussion board and bug fixes via the open-source JBoss without much trouble.
Talend Open Studio is free and we are not using the enterprise version which comes with licence and support. So, mostly depend on the open source community for any issues that we face. The document is good and we didn't have to use any support so far. We did evaluate the enterprise version and so far sticking to the free version.
Oracle SOA Suite (Oracle BPM + Oracle BPEL + other components) and IBM WebSphere middleware is most costly and suited if you are already using applications and other middleware components from these vendors. Mulesoft (Salesforce Mule ESB) is best when you need deep integration with one of Salesforce's existing products. JBoss and Apache Web Server are best when you do not want to invest infant CapEx/OpEx on license fee. Apache Web Server based middleware is best for simple SOA applications.
Informatica has a limited number of components that you can use. This places a heavy limitation on the capabilities of Informatica. On the other hand, Talend allows you to create your own custom components using Java. For businesses that need to perform a wide variety of data operations, it can be quite useful to have the option of creating your own custom components to satisfy business needs.
I delivered projects the client did not believe were possible, and I provided intermediate value by providing visibility to hidden data problems in their systems they could not detect before.
I was able to work 3 projects at a time, pausing gracefully in one while switching to the other, with minimal effort.