NEWS RELEASE
11 June 2004
£50,000 prize for Britain’s best-kept IT secret
British
engineers at global IT giant IBM have won the Royal Academy of
Engineering MacRobert Award for an innovation that most people have
never come across.
WebSphere MQ software has helped businesses
save billions of dollars by providing a failsafe means of exchanging
business-critical information between computer systems, irrespective of
their location and regardless of whatever hardware, programming
language, operating system or communication protocol they use.
WebSphere’s
development team, from IBM’s Hursley Laboratory near Winchester,
received the MacRobert Gold Medal and £50,000 prize in London last
night from HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, at the Academy’s
Awards Dinner, beating off stiff competition from Pilkington’s
self-cleaning windows, Sharp’s 3D displays and Delphi Diesel’s
emission-busting injection systems.
“Without WebSphere MQ we
might never have enjoyed the full benefits of the e-commerce
revolution,” says Dr Robin Paul FREng, Chairman of the MacRobert Award
Judging Panel. “When you realise how many IT systems have to talk to
each other when, for example, you check your balance and transfer funds
online you really start to appreciate the value of this innovation. By
enabling seamless communications between computers, the engineers at
Hursley have effectively created the oil that now keeps the world’s
e-commerce machine running.”
WebSphere MQ was conceived at a
time when organisations realised they were becoming totally dependent
on a proliferation of incompatible, non-communicating information
systems. Whilst the IT suppliers promoted replacement, upgrade or
integration, Dr Tony Storey FREng and Tim Holloway came up with the
simple – but heretical – idea that the right solution was to connect
existing systems.
Launched in 1994, WebSphere MQ integrates
servers, back office systems and databases, reliably handling hundreds
of millions of messages every day. But, like all simple ideas,
WebSphere MQ was not easy to implement and the development team faced
huge challenges along the way. These included having to support 40
different computing platforms, filing over 120 patents as well as
having to transfer the original system to the Internet. But they did
this successfully – and continue to improve it – such that WebSphere MQ
is now an essential part of the mainstream infrastructure for over
10,000 customers, including more than 80 per cent of companies in the
Fortune 100.
“We are delighted that the IBM WebSphere software
family has been honoured with this prestigious award by the Royal
Academy of Engineering,” says Graham Spittle, Hursley Laboratory
Director and IBM’s Vice President, Business Integration Development.
“WebSphere MQ is one of the most important and successful distributed
system technologies in the industry today, and we are proud that this
achievement was initiated by a UK team. This award recognises the
importance of software as an engineering discipline in its own right,
as much as it recognises the success of IBM WebSphere MQ. The MacRobert
Award is an indication of the maturity of the industry and recognition
of the significance of the role IT plays in the modern world.”
ends
Notes for editors
- Broadcast-quality TV footage of the award presentation and interviews with the winners are available on request.
- The IBM team who have won the 2004 MacRobert Award are:
Tim Holloway, IBM Distinguished Engineer Peter Lambros, Senior Technical Staff Member Peter Niblett, Senior Technical Staff Member Graham Spittle, IBM Vice President and Director of the Hursley Laboratory Dr Tony Storey FREng, IBM Fellow
- The
MacRobert Award, first presented in 1969, honours the winning company
with a gold medal and the team members with a prize of £50,000. The
presentation of the Award recognises the successful development of
innovative ideas in engineering. It seeks to demonstrate the importance
of engineering and the role of engineers and scientists in contributing
to national prosperity and international prestige.
- Founded
in 1976, the Royal Academy of Engineering promotes the engineering and
technological welfare of the country. Our fellowship - comprising the
UK’s most eminent engineers - provides the leadership and expertise for
our activities, which focus on the relationships between engineering,
technology, and the quality of life. As a national academy, we provide
independent and impartial advice to Government; work to secure the next
generation of engineers; and provide a voice for Britain’s engineering
community.
For more information please contact:
Jane Sutton or Claire McLoughlin at the Royal Academy of Engineering Tel. 020 7227 0536/0510; mobile 07989 513045; email: suttonj@raeng.co.uk
or
Clare Chamberlain at IBM UK Tel. 020 7202 3259; mobile 07971 861717; email: clare_chamberlain@uk.ibm.com
© Copyright Royal Academy of Engineering 2001
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