This is what I've received today by e-mail from the SearchSOA.com

Gartner's Yefim Natis is sure that "SOA is integration". Are we getting 
anywhere with this opinion?

"You can only do it in parts of a domain where you have control."  -  sounds to 
me like you can make some money "in parts" (hey, it is the financial crisis, 
dude) and do not even think about approaching your Business telling them that 
they might make much more money if they do it top-down for the real business 
parts (that cannot be small by nature).

Thanks to such "experts", "This past summer was a cold one for SOA". Indeed, a 
keyboard (especially, wireless) is not the best tool for nut-cracking; why we 
need it at all?

What can we do to slow down spreading such Integration SOA madness?

- Michael
 

FROM THE EDITOR


Gartner AADI Summit: SOA going into 2009
[Jack Vaughan]


Several years into the SOA era of application and integration development, SOA 
continues on without a full consensus opinion of what SOA is. 
Yet there were plenty of takes on what SOA is at this year's Gartner's 
Application Architecture, Development & Integration Summit 2008 in Las Vegas, 
and while the definitions and prognostications on SOA remained diverse, a 
picture emerges.
It does seem one great trait of SOA is that it is an ongoing process. Its goal 
is to favorably and repeatedly change development outcomes based around 
logically partitioned services. It shares this goal with predecessor 
components, objects and elements of CASE methodologies. But it is different.
The idea that 'one SOA fits all' may be fading. "SOA is integration. It is a 
strategic initiative," said Gartner analyst Yefim Natis. "You can only do it in 
parts of a domain where you have control."
One SOA at a time 
At last week's Gartner Summit, Natis discussed varieties of SOA, and pointed to 
the fact that many companies are instituting SOAs, but they are doing so 
without a singular architectural blueprint for all IT. Some people, according 
to Natis, are starting to try to federate their 'domain SOAs' based on 
agreed-to interoperability protocols and transports that span the full 
organization.
Sometimes, things are best seen in comparison to what they are not. In this 
example, the 'anti-SOA' may be seen as the mainframe application of yore. Said 
Natis: "The monolithic application is the other side of SOA." In other words, a 
SOA is not part of just one app.
This past summer was a cold one for SOA, with critics tossing barbs, and 
denigrating aspects of SOA. Some criticism may be well placed. The Gartner 
conference brought to mind a paraphrase of an old Elvis Costello song: 'What's 
so funny about shareable, swappable and modular?' SOA is less a technology than 
a way to dependably extract business value from technology. It is a journey, 
and it involves work.
Read more about the Gartner Summit.



Gartner AADI Summit: SOA going into 2009
[Jack Vaughan]


Several years into the SOA era of application and integration development, SOA 
continues on without a full consensus opinion of what SOA is. 
Yet there were plenty of takes on what SOA is at this year's Gartner's 
Application Architecture, Development & Integration Summit 2008 in Las Vegas, 
and while the definitions and prognostications on SOA remained diverse, a 
picture emerges.
It does seem one great trait of SOA is that it is an ongoing process. Its goal 
is to favorably and repeatedly change development outcomes based around 
logically partitioned services. It shares this goal with predecessor 
components, objects and elements of CASE methodologies. But it is different.
The idea that 'one SOA fits all' may be fading. "SOA is integration. It is a 
strategic initiative," said Gartner analyst Yefim Natis. "You can only do it in 
parts of a domain where you have control."
One SOA at a time 
At last week's Gartner Summit, Natis discussed varieties of SOA, and pointed to 
the fact that many companies are instituting SOAs, but they are doing so 
without a singular architectural blueprint for all IT. Some people, according 
to Natis, are starting to try to federate their 'domain SOAs' based on 
agreed-to interoperability protocols and transports that span the full 
organization.
Sometimes, things are best seen in comparison to what they are not. In this 
example, the 'anti-SOA' may be seen as the mainframe application of yore. Said 
Natis: "The monolithic application is the other side of SOA." In other words, a 
SOA is not part of just one app.
This past summer was a cold one for SOA, with critics tossing barbs, and 
denigrating aspects of SOA. Some criticism may be well placed. The Gartner 
conference brought to mind a paraphrase of an old Elvis Costello song: 'What's 
so funny about shareable, swappable and modular?' SOA is less a technology than 
a way to dependably extract business value from technology. It is a journey, 
and it involves work.
Read more about the Gartner Summit.



      

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