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Gervas
===================================================================
The Clueless CIO

We recently ran a poll to determine how "in the loop" the CIO was
about Web services development efforts. We chose to ask about Web
services because that's where SOA efforts usually start: at the grass
roots of the organization, and used to solve sticky integration issues
that can't easily be worked out using more traditional methods. 

The results were highly instructive. Only 21 percent of respondents
said that the CIO was "fully informed" about Web services development
efforts. An additional 34 percent said s/he had a "general" idea of
what was going on. But a whopping 45 percent said that the CIO "hadn't
a clue." That's a really poor showing. 

True, it was better than the same poll that we had run a year earlier,
in which 56 percent had poured scorn on the CIO for not knowing what
was going on in his/her own organization, but 45 percent is still an
unacceptable figure, especially since SOAs are supposedly becoming
strategically essential to enterprises. 

Which brings us to this week's main feature, appropriately titled the
CIO Challenge. Not surprisingly, given our poll, the key challenge
facing CIOs is communication. The article focuses mainly on the
communications issues between the technology and business arms of an
enterprise, but the issues it raises and the advice it offers could
very well be applied to internal communications as well. Read away! 

We also had a review of Logidex's LogicLibrary by the CRN Test Center.
The Test Center's engineers believe that object orientation alone is
not enough to create an agile enterprise that can reuse and maintain
source code. After all, code discovery and cross-platform and
environment manageability as well as reusability must play a key role
in source management. This is especially critical with SOAs, which are
a hodgepodge of reusable code. LogicLibrary passed all the tests with
flying colors, offering a comprehensive solution for managing software
assets and improving reusability. Its metadata repository can store
COM components, Enterprise JavaBeans, .Net components, and legacy
code. Check it out . . .it would be a valuable tool for any SOA
development arsenal. 

Finally, we had a news item about Sun Microsystems having finished its
acquisition of SOA integration vendor SeeBeyond. SeeBeyond
stockholders approved the acquisition and will receive $4.25 per share
for an aggregate consideration of about $383 million. The SeeBeyond
subsidiary will operate under Sun's software division, and technology
from the acquired company is expected to enhance the value of the Java
Enterprise System platform. Sun president Jonathan Schwartz calls the
synergy between the two companies "remarkable," and says that
SeeBeyond technology has already been integrated into Sun's core
product portfolio. If so, that was fast work. We'll see how this plays
out in terms of improvements in Sun's ability to deliver on its SOA
integration promises. 

That's all for this week. Have a good one. 

Alice LaPlante
Editor, SOA Pipeline
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.SOA-Pipeline.com








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