Pegasus
Solutions, Inc. (Nasdaq: PEGS) today announced it is nearing completion
of an XML (eXtensible Markup Language) version of its interface to its
Electronic Distribution Switch for the processing of hotel reservations
transactions.
Dallas-based Pegasus Solutions is a leading provider of hotel industry
transaction processing solutions and electronic commerce services.
Tagged HotelMLTM, Pegasus' XML technology is an emerging standard that
will eventually replace AMF (ASCII Messaging Format) as the preferred
means used by Pegasus for connecting to hotels and processing hotel
transactions. Pegasus will soon announce a few of its HotelML XML beta
customers. The company is scheduled to begin beta testing Pegasus'
HotelML in first quarter 2001, soon to be followed by a formal launch.
Steve Reynolds, Pegasus Solutions' senior vice president of information
technology, said, "The majority of the world's electronic hotel
transactions are being facilitated by Pegasus, and we are committed to
continuing to use the most effective technologies as the foundation of
our service offerings. We rethought the entire process of handling
hotel-oriented data to allow for optimum functionality, ease-of-use and
efficiency and created a data model utilizing XML that interfaces with
hotels' CRSs and our own Online Distribution Database of static property
data."
XML is creating a buzz in the hotel industry with its potential to be
widely adopted as a standard format for processing and distributing
data, such as traveler profiles and reservations. XML is the next
generation Internet technology, poised not only to replace HTML with a
more robust equivalent, but also to add a variety of new functionality
to the Web. XML is an open-source software technology developed and
maintained by the W3C, a worldwide organization that has also developed
and maintained HTML over the years. XML provides a
technology-independent foundation on which vendors can base products and
solutions, allowing for the seamless exchange of data across different
software platforms. XML and its associated suite of technologies, such
as parsers, transformations and validation, can be leveraged and reused
in a wide variety of applications including authoring, browsing and
content analysis. XML has been recognized as especially applicable for
travel-related e-commerce, because it can allow online services to set
up dynamic and flexible Web sites without the need for complex database
programming.
A sampling of some of the positive aspects associated with XML include:
-Free parsers. Necessary for software to get a complete view of data,
parsers can be downloaded off the Internet for free with XML, versus
having to write a parser.
-Standard APIs. Several APIs (Application Programming Interfaces), such
as SAX, DOM and JDOM, are readily available in many programming
languages, allowing developers freedom of choice when accessing
information structured in XML.
-Being extensible saves development time. Using XML, Pegasus can create
its own "dictionary" of elements and define rules for how to arrange
elements into a "sentence," such as those required to interface with its
Electronic Distribution Switch. The dictionary of elements can then be
extended and reused to define new sentences, such as those used to
interface to a property management system or to a hotel central
reservations system.
-Cost efficient validation. Validation is a part of the suite of
technologies available with XML. It has been estimated that up to 60
percent of application code is validation, thus a significant amount of
overhead can be eliminated at almost no cost. |