One of the premises of OIC has always been the low code approach with ease of implementation. Throughout the entire product lifecycle, this was always a main feature driver. Recipes are not new, but they went from 20 to over 150 in the last year or so (the time I took off from OIC
To be honest this is a phenomenal step up in the offering, which shows a big focus on providing built-in Integrations and OIC3 is not shy of this, as it is all displayed on the main home page.
We can filter/search by name or application. I feel this would be better served with a dropbox with all the available applications involved in these recipes. Either way, below you see the result when I search for HCM recipes, where we have 15 that cover some of the more common HCM integration needs, like Microsoft 365, export to an FTP server, and many more.
So how does this work?
You pick the recipe you want, then you add it.
Recipes will create the necessary connections and also integrations. Each recipe will require different configurations – you should always refer to the recipe documentation – this is the one for this example.
This recipe actually does not give you a weather API service already configured, this is something we need to add.
Now let’s see the Integration.
I am going to activate it and test it – no changes were made – all default.
Quite simple, and everything looks different since I last used OIC.
Much faster, UX better organized, all improving the developer experience!
Check the documentation on all the recipes here.