In a new report, Transaction Processing in The U.S.: Are The Big Guys Ready For Open Systems? Celent examines the appetite among top-tier U.S. banks and processors for replacing their legacy switch infrastructure with systems built using open platforms such as Unix, Windows, and Linux. A switch infrastructure is a system that allows banks to acquire, authorize, and switch a transaction, as well as to drive an ATM or point-of-sale terminal. The report also reviews the vendor marketplace for these systems. The report shows that, thanks to the 10-40% cost savings promised by open systems, processors and banks could greatly benefit from shifting their systems to open technologies (Windows, Linux, Unix). Concerns with the reliability and availability of open systems, but especially with the high cost of replacing a processing infrastructureâ€â€Âbetween US$30-100 million for a large organizationâ€â€Âremain key impediments to legacy infrastructure replacement. Despite such constraints, Celent believes that the need to reduce costs in processing as well as new risk-sharing agreements with software makers and integrators may well drive a handful of US organizations to switch to open systems in the next two to three years. Although none of the 25 U.S. banks and processors surveyed by Celent for this report had already established a business case or a budget, there is a great deal of interest in integrating disparate payment systems into a single payment hub. Switch vendors mentioned in this report include ACI Worldwide, eFunds, S2 Systems, Mosaic Software, Oasis Technology, SLMSoft, CV Systems, and Nomad Software.
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