If the writers would be paid for the sake of writing, that would be like "SOA 
is saving SOA". I am for it!

- Michael



________________________________
From: Gervas Douglas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, December 9, 2008 3:06:06 PM
Subject: [service-orientated-architecture] Linthicum of 5 saviours of SOA


<<Five things that are saving SOA,
Recession Edition 
Looking at the more optimistic side of SOA
Referring to my last post, "Five
things that are killing SOA, Recession Edition," Joe McKendrick
added his
take on my comments.
I don't know to what extent external players could line up
to "kill" SOA at this point, since SOA itself is a philosophy or
methodology that shapes the way enterprises address problems through
IT. You can kill the associated technologies and products, but not the
ideas and practices.
Can't disagree with that, and my point was that you can't kill SOA
the concept, but the companies that sell SOA technology and the
successful use of SOA as a core architectural pattern -- that's another
story. 
However, to Joe's point, and looking at the more optimistic side of
SOA, here are five things that are saving SOA
technology, and doing so in a down economy. 
SOA bloggers are saving SOA.  Getting
beyond the hype and to the core issues, SOA bloggers such as most of
those on my blogroll below and yours truly are informing people about
SOA, including best practices, technology that works, and case studies
both good and bad. This open flow of information, in and around the
vendor hype, has the effect of arming SOA architects with the
unfiltered info they need to make SOA work the first time. 
Good CTOs are saving SOA. Those charged with
setting the technology direction for larger enterprises out there have
an opportunity to drive change for the better. CTOs (or those that have
the role and not the title) that approach SOA as an architecture will
win the game. However, those that look at SOA as another chance to toss
technology at a problem will fail. It's that simple. 
Visionary CEOs are saving SOA. Clearly, SOA needs a business driver and support 
from the top. CEOs
that understand the value of fixing something once and for all, and the
ability to change the culture to accept the changes needed to make SOA
successful, will save SOA. 
Small and innovative SOA consulting is saving SOA. Call them boutique, 
startups, advisors, or mentors, the smaller SOA
consulting players out there typically have the best advice and few
hidden agendas. If you're going to leverage one of the larger firms,
make sure you have another opinion. 
SOA is saving SOA. SOA is a proven
and effective approach to enterprise architecture, and if you follow
some very basic, but sometimes difficult, steps you'll succeed. This
has been proven time and time again. Moreover, you'll find an ROI that
is many times the outlay of resources. Just the success of the approach
of SOA will ultimately save SOA.>>

You can read this at:

http://weblog. infoworld. com/realworldsoa /archives/ 2008/12/five_ things_tha. 
html?source= NLC-SOA&cgd=2008-12- 08

Gervas
 


      

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