If I deal with finance I'm assuming certain elements about finance in order
to deal with them, namely that they work within a certain context in the
organisation and are therefore about to do other things directly that I have
to ask them to do.

Isn't that a form of container?


On 26/11/06, Vikas Deolaliker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

  Why is the definition important?

The intent of SOA is quite well understood, IMHO, i.e. de-containerize
business logic. If I write business logic that assumes a type of container
and its services, I am not doing SOA.

The question of who enforces the business logic and who defines it is
something that we may want to discuss on this forum.

Vikas
----- Original Message ----
From: Gervas Douglas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, November 25, 2006 6:30:55 AM
Subject: [service-orientated-architecture] Another Crack at Defining SOA

 No one anywhere in the known universe has yet come up with a
definition of SOA which commands widespread acceptance. Perhaps it is
time we had another crack at it.

Over to you ladies and gents...

Gervas


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