Taming the SOA Beast – Part 2 » The TEC Blog
... of this blog topic introduced the notion of how complex and tricky it can be to manage and govern enterprise
applications’ service oriented architecture (SOA ...
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| blog.technologyevaluation.com/blog/2008/09/23/taming-the-soa-beast-–-part-2/ - 53k - 2008-09-23 |
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Taming the SOA Beast – Part 1 » The TEC Blog
... and years of experience as a functional consultant should suffice for understanding the advantages and possible
perils of service oriented architecture (SOA). ...
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| blog.technologyevaluation.com/blog/2008/09/16/taming-the-soa-beast-–-part-1/ - 49k - 2008-09-16 |
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SOA From a Management Perspective: Part Two
| by Joseph J. Strub |
... Part One provides a basic understanding of SOA, the rollout plans for major software vendors, and the
benefits of SOA. Concerns About SOA. ...
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| http:/.../ResearchHighlights/BusinessApplications/2007/01/research_notes/TU_BA_XJS_01_08_07_1.asp - 15k - 2007-01-08 |
| Summary: Despite the numerous benefits companies can expect from service-oriented architecture, the technology is still relatively
new and implementation costs are steep, raising several concerns. For most companies, a wait-and-see approach is likely the
best course of action for now.
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SOA From a Management Perspective: Part One
| by Joe Strub |
... Featured Author - Joe Strub - January 5, 2007. We have been hearing about service-oriented architecture (SOA)
for some time. Now, major ...
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| http:/.../ResearchHighlights/BusinessApplications/2007/01/research_notes/TU_BA_XJS_01_05_07_1.asp - 19k - 2007-01-05 |
| Summary: The big buzzword in enterprise-wide package software is service-oriented architecture (SOA). SOA promises to solve a company's
software ills, making life easier for information technology departments. This research note takes a look at this new architecture
and highlights some concerns.
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Understanding SOA, Web Services, BPM, BPEL, and More Part One: SOA ...
| by P.J. Jakovljevic |
... The battle for the dominance in Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) and Web services has so far largely
been a war of words without the clear winner yet (and ...
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| http:/.../Research/ResearchHighlights/Erp/2004/12/research_notes/TU_ER_PJ_12_22_04_1.asp - 25k - 2004-12-22 |
| Summary: In the larger schema of things, SOA would espouse general, more abstract concepts of software reusability and encapsulation
within certain boundaries (as to then provide access to that software via defined interfaces), Web services would then make
these SOA concepts vendor-independent due to their use of
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Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays Part Four: SOA and Web ...
| by P.J. Jakovljevic |
... Service-oriented Architecture. SOA is a development approach in which all functions (so-called "services")
are defined using a published description language. ...
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| http:/.../Research/ResearchHighlights/Erp/2005/03/research_notes/EN_ER_PJ_03_17_05_1.asp - 24k - 2005-03-17 |
| Summary: The battle for the dominance in service-oriented architecture (SOA) and Web services has nonetheless so far largely been a
war of words without the clear winner yet (and not any time soon), as many underlying Internet-based standards have emerged
only recently.
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Understanding SOA, Web Services, BPM, and BPEL Part Two: BPEL and ...
| by P.J. Jakovljevic |
... For that reason, large enterprises will still tend to look to other more complete solutions or even to the
above mentioned BPM, SOA, and Web services ...
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| http:/.../Research/ResearchHighlights/Erp/2004/12/research_notes/TU_ER_PJ_12_23_04_1.asp - 19k - 2004-12-23 |
| Summary: In a somewhat simplified language, while Web services allow applications to easily exchange and reuse information, it is only
when they are orchestrated (coordinated) into long-running business flows or processes that enterprises can realize their
true value.
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The Future of SOA-based Applications and Infrastructure
| by Olin Thompson and P.J. Jakovljevic |
... The Future of SOA-based Applications and Infrastructure Featured Author - Olin Thompson and PJ Jakovljevic
- May 7, 2005. 1. The Future. ...
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| http:/.../Research/ResearchHighlights/Erp/2005/05/research_notes/TU_ER_XOT_05_07_05_1.asp - 24k - 2005-05-07 |
| Summary: The ultimate winner in the SOA market will have to provide industry-specific solutions solving essential problems that others
cannot. Focus must move away from technology lock-in and vendor dependency, to best solutions for customers, even if it means
customers can use competitor products.
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Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays Part Six: Weaknesses ...
| by P.J. Jakovljevic |
... Part Two discussed strategy. Part Three covered strategy shifts. Part Four examined SOA and Web services.
Part Five analyzed the Collaxa acquisition. ...
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| http:/.../Research/ResearchHighlights/Erp/2005/03/research_notes/EN_ER_PJ_03_19_05_1.asp - 20k - 2005-03-19 |
| Summary: Time will tell whether Oracle's vocal endorsement of open technologies such as J2EE and BPEL will allow customers to readily
adopt solutions that fit their needs and that quickly integrate with their existing infrastructure.
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SOA as a Foundation for Applications and Infrastructure
| by Olin Thompson and P.J. Jakovljevic |
... Featured Author - Olin Thompson and PJ Jakovljevic - May 6, 2005 1. SOA as a Foundation. 2. Challenges
for the Big Few. ... SOA as a Foundation. ...
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| http:/.../Research/ResearchHighlights/Erp/2005/05/research_notes/TU_ER_XOT_05_06_05_1.asp - 25k - 2005-05-06 |
| Summary: SOA promises interoperability in the heterogeneous business world by promoting loosely-coupled architecture, reusing software,
and ending vendor-dependency. However, to be viable, dominant vendors must redesign and expose the hundreds of application
functions as services. How are they meeting this challe
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