The paybox Mobiliser Architecture comprises the technical foundation of the paybox Mobiliser Platform and Products and enables their deployment in various environments. The paybox Mobiliser Architecture is:
Flexible - Architectures for small, medium or large systems
- Open – based on technology and security standards
- Future-prove – scalable and reliable
- Proven – high performance and high availability
- Extendible – modular and open
- Services oriented - integration, application development and interoperability
- Standard technologies – J2EE, JBoss, BEA, Oracle, Linux, HPUX, Sun Solaris, MS Windows
The paybox Mobiliser Architecture is based primarily on the Model-View-Controller (MVC) design pattern, the industry-standard for J2EE application development, with facades providing standard interfaces into the business services for client-side applications. The paybox Mobiliser Architecture enables the deployment of the paybox Mobiliser Platform and all paybox Mobiliser Products different environments.
The paybox Card Mobiliser Solution

- Designed to run on the UNIX operating system.
- Object oriented design and completely modular. Developed in C&C++.
- Layered architecture. Provides flexibility to plug in or remove any layer depending on the need.
- Facilitates both distributed and centralized transaction switching models.
- Designed for High Availability fault tolerant architecture.
- Designed to be completely configurable and parameterized. It can be configured using a GUI based Configuration Management System.
- System can interface with any RDBMS.
- Can be scaled up massively (without modification) with an increase in number of Channels and the total transaction volumes.
- Design provides for having multiple front-end client systems either installed on the Local Network or on the WAN.
- Front-end systems based on Client Server architecture.
- Supports a GUI interface to all front-end systems.
- Built-in operational security when accessed through the front-end systems. Only authorized Users can access the system.
- Front-end systems are programmed using Visual Basic, JAVA.

