On MS's technology fit to SOA:

The problem with SOA is that everyone and his dog has what they deem
an SOA product.  Interestingly, in most cases, the product they offer
is very similar to what they were offering prior to the "rise" of SOA.

MS's approach seems to be much more in the vein of assumptions that
the SalesForce.com model is one that most people will adopt.  I think
they are working at a story there but that's all about external facing
services.  I've seen less about internal facing (i.e. behind the
firewall) services.  I suspect that MS would say the technology is
suitable for both kinds of service but I sense that their emphasis is
being directed by their expectation of where the big bucks will be made.

And if MS are being coy as you put it, I think that's because they see
the end game being not ESB or SOA itself but the external service's
market as exhibited by SalesForce.com and so they're trying to leap
over a couple of intermediary steps thus gaining a lead.  They'll
backfill to ESB's etc if they need to but they are after a much more
valuable beachhead.

On Sun and their software:

I think it's horrifyingly simple - Sun still don't see any value in
software other than as a means for getting you to buy their
hardware/OS.  Schwarz has recently been making overtures to HP about
merging stuff with Solaris 10.  That could definitely be interpreted
as "HP and Sun are getting commoditized out of the market, we need to
be bigger, let's join forces and customer bases".  Smells like
consolidation to me.

So why are Sun coy?  They're not - they're naive/inept - they don't
even know they have software  that plays in the area of SOA!  Being
specific, there are various engineers who do know that but the sales
side of the organization can't see it, and can't guarentee to sell
boxes with it ignoring the fact that they could sell lots of software
boxes.  Note also that all indications I have suggest that most of the
engineers don't get it either - they still inhabit a three-tier or
client-server world and can't/won't grok services and are still
building much of their software to function in that old world.

Two cents from a techie,

Dan.

--- In [email protected], "Gervas
Douglas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> We read quite a lot in this Group about Java and other non-MS
> technologies.  And this depite Sun not being over-aggressive about
> marketing software, and doing even less for some of its Orphan Java
> technologies (how often do they bother to mention Jini, RIO, Jxta
etc.??).
> 
> What we don't read or hear much about is what is going on in the
> Microsoft SOA universe.  I know MS do not do much to push the concept
> of SOA, but a lot of SOA implementations take place in .NET
> environments.  Most big organisations seem to have a mixture of .NET
> and Java.  So what are MS doing about SOA middleware now that every
> platform vendor and his dog is offering an ESB?  There is of course
> the spectre of Indigo on the horizon, but it is not readily apparent
> how this is going to fit into the SOA middleware scene.  Do any of you
> have any information on this?  Come to think of it, why are Sun and
> Microsoft so coy about these key aspects of their technology?
> 
> Gervas
>








 
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