OpenLegacy

RATING:

5.0

(1)
Overview

About OpenLegacy

OpenLegacy is a cloud-native, open-source business solution development platform that allows users to build, extend and manage digital services from legacy systems to the cloud. The platform assists with data transformation and migration services for mainframe applications. It helps users extend mainframe applications with a web interface or mobile apps. Teams can handle data security using encryption techniques, access service operations through a single console and generate reports on performance metrics at the service level.

OpenLegacy Pricing

Contact OpenLegacy for pricing information.

Starting price: 

$10,000.00 per month

Free trial: 

Available

Free version: 

Available

OpenLegacy dashboard

OpenLegacy Reviews

Overall Rating

5.0

Ratings Breakdown

Secondary Ratings

Ease-of-use

5

Customer Support

4

Value for money

0

Functionality

4

Most Helpful Reviews for OpenLegacy

1 Review

Jeffrey

Industrial Automation, 51-200 employees

Used weekly for less than 12 months

Review Source: Capterra
This reviewer was invited by the software vendor to submit an honest review.

OVERALL RATING:

5

EASE OF USE

5

CUSTOMER SUPPORT

4

FUNCTIONALITY

4

Reviewed February 2019

Opens The Door To Connect Modern Web Products To An Old Legacy System

OpenLegacy opens the door to connect modern web products to our old legacy system. Before OpenLegacy, we would either transition our entire system (a huge undertaking) or do painful workarounds to allow for innovative web products to send data back into our system of record.

PROS

OpenLegacy is used anytime we need to send data from a modern web application into our iSeries legacy system. At this point, we are still developing the web applications to feed OpenLegacy. Our first use case is entering freight data into our legacy system. With OpenLegacy, we will be able to use a modern web form which is easy for our employees at the freight dock to use, and get data into our legacy system.

CONS

I would like to see SSL out-of-the-box. OpenLegacy certainly does SSL, but it was not the default for our use case. We are currently working with OpenLegacy to cross the SSL bridge and suspect that most users will want to do the same.