IBM Sterling Connect:Direct is used within the financial services industry, government agencies and other large organizations that have multiple computing platforms: mainframes, midrange, Linux or Windows systems. Connect:Direct's primary advantage over FTP was that it made file transfers routine and reliable. In the early 1990s TCP/IP support was added. Traditionally, Sterling Connect:Direct used IBM's Systems Network Architecture (SNA) via dedicated private lines between the parties involved to transfer the data. In 2010, IBM completed the purchase of Sterling Commerce from AT&T. AT&T merged with SBC effective November 2005. In 2000, SBC Communications acquired Sterling Commerce and held it until 2010.
Connect:Mailbox)) and the Sterling EDI Network business.
#Ndm stockhouse software#
In 1996, Sterling Software executed a public spinoff of a new entity called Sterling Commerce, which consisted of the Communications Software Group (the business unit responsible for marketing the Connect:Direct product and other file transfer products sourced from the pre-1993 Sterling Software (e.g. NDM was renamed to Connect:Direct in 1993, following the acquisition of Systems Center, Inc. It was developed for mainframes, with other platforms being added as the product grew.