Scott McNealy, chairman and co-founder of Sun Microsystems, and Ray August, president of CSC's Property & Casualty Insurance Division, unveiled the system today to nearly 1,000 insurance carriers, industry analysts, and technology and business executives at CSC's Connect 2008 Conference in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.
"Sun, a leading innovator that introduced Java technology in 1995, continues to be one of CSC's most strategic teammates as we serve financial services clients who are looking for ways to advance and streamline their businesses now more than ever," said Jim Cook, president of CSC's Financial Services Sector.
CSC developed POINT IN J in Java, one of the most popular programming languages, and teamed with Sun to certify the new solution on the Sun Solaris Operating System. POINT IN J will be available for deployment by the end of the year.
"While many smaller vendors have made the move to modern platforms, CSC's decision to build one of the most widely used policy administration systems ever sold on Java technology underscores the demand for legacy migration," said Chad Hersh, principal, Insurance, Novarica. "The availability of a modern, end-to-end solution from a vendor like CSC will certainly catch the attention of carriers."
The POINT IN J and POINT IN policy administration systems support end-to-end P&C insurance processing for all U.S. states and all lines of coverage. CSC will continue to support and maintain both versions through its Continuous Delivery software upgrades, which give insurers incremental updates as soon as they become available. In addition, POINT IN's integrated components are compatible with POINT IN J.
No comments:
Post a Comment