Joynd, formed from the June 2020 merger of CloudMills and HRNX, provides holistic HR integrations along the employee life cycle, giving employers the power to choose best-of-fit applications, and vendors the opportunity to deliver. The solution boasts an extensive library of pre-built connectors, relationships with vendors, and aggregate expertise to support integrated HR.
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Oracle WebLogic Server
Score 7.4 out of 10
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Oracle WebLogic Server is a unified and extensible platform for developing, deploying and running enterprise applications, such as Java, for on-premises and in the cloud. WebLogic Server offers a scalable implementation of Java Enterprise Edition (EE) and Jakarta EE.
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Pricing
Joynd (CloudMills + HRNX)
Oracle WebLogic Server
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Joynd (CloudMills + HRNX)
Oracle WebLogic Server
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
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More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Joynd (CloudMills + HRNX)
Oracle WebLogic Server
Features
Joynd (CloudMills + HRNX)
Oracle WebLogic Server
Cloud Data Integration
Comparison of Cloud Data Integration features of Product A and Product B
Joynd (CloudMills + HRNX)
8.3
Ratings
4% above category average
Oracle WebLogic Server
-
Ratings
Pre-built connectors
9.00 Ratings
00 Ratings
Connector modification
8.00 Ratings
00 Ratings
Support for real-time and batch integration
8.00 Ratings
00 Ratings
Data quality services
9.00 Ratings
00 Ratings
Data security features
8.00 Ratings
00 Ratings
Monitoring console
8.00 Ratings
00 Ratings
Application Servers
Comparison of Application Servers features of Product A and Product B
I see Oracle WebLogic Application Server being appropriate when an application needs several different data sources and messaging providers configured and accessible, with a configured level of control of resources (connection pools) and timeouts. It is also advisable to create distributed resources that you can configure as always active to provide more processing power, or as failover for situations of availability in case of disaster recovery, for example. An application where the number of required resources configured is very small and almost non-changeable, and no scalability is required, some other options exist in the market with less cost.
CloudMills + HRNX has experienced business development with concentrating on the sales.
And promoting method moreover as configuration, adaptation, and implementation of CRM systems.
Their management consultants have in-depth expertise in sales and promoting from line positions in massive transnational firms moreover as smaller Swedish firms.
I love that the weblogic dashboard allows you to manage applications and see the status of each application.
Oracle WebLogic Application Server simplifies usage periods in the development and production of business applications.
Oracle WebLogic Server allows me to define various aspects of data source entry, including creating a specific multiple connection to facilitate data entry.
Performance and administration are highlighted in weblogic.
The Admin UI should be further simplified, the UI design was not too user-friendly— too many options and clicks required, difficult for the new beginners to figure out what they are looking for.
The admin server becomes the single failure point, although Oracle suggested some workarounds by setting VIP and VHost, it was not quite easy and straight forward.
Domain replication is hard, requiring a lot of knowledge and scripts efforts.
Admin will hang if the node manager communication encounters some issues for one or some nodes in the domain/cluster.
Not able to kill/terminate the stuck thread, the only way is to restart the managed server (JVM)
Oracle WebLogic Server has so many features that sometimes it's hard to find the right place to setup things, I think the dated user interface does not help with that either. This has a direct impact when deciding to use it as your application server, you'd need to have the right people and invest the time needed to master it. If you're application justifies it then it will definitely be a great choice in the long run.
Because CloudMills + HRNX seeks to resolve one in every of the largest obstacles facing unit of time departments quickly accessing unit of time knowledge.
I wasn't involved in selecting the server we were using but in our team we've made some efforts to improve the local deployment process by trying some other Applicational servers too. Apache Tomcat was a more lightweight solution for sure, and it coped well with our applications needs, configuration and performance wise. Despite that, since we didn't got clearance to change that into our local servers, we kept using Weblogic to guarantee compliance between the testing environments and production.