Jack Vaughan of SearchSOA replied to Anne's blog:

<<With 2009 still new, the SOA space continues to resemble a teapot in
which tempests are always blowing. A look at the First Day's e-mailbox
showed a missive courtesy of Burton Group and SOA Practice VP Anne
Thomas Manes, which proclaimed that "SOA is Dead." Despite this
'news,' the editor of SearchSOA.com decided to come to work the next
day, and not for the purpose of dissecting a corpse.

You may remember the precursor to the SOA is Dead movement. That was
the SOA Fatigue movement, covered fully in these pages in The Dog Days
of SOA and elsewhere. It referenced some failed SOA projects cited by
Burton Group as intrinsic (maybe they would say 'fatal') SOA flaws.
Now Manes has gone a step further, declaring SOA as dead.

"Once thought to be the savior of IT, she proclaims that SOA instead
turned into a great failed experiment—at least for most organizations,
" she writes.

Among Manes' contentions is that too many SOA projects failed. That
SOA became too big. "It's time to accept reality. SOA fatigue has
turned into SOA disillusionment," she writes.

To which we respond: Projects do fail, don't they? Who said 'Big SOA'
was ever a good idea? And, if someone is 'disillusioned' now, does
that not imply that they were 'illusioned' in the first place?

Manes has long been a leading SOA thinker, with a special
understanding of SOA repositories, registries, and governance. She
also has been at times refreshingly controversial.

But in here latest tract, Manes wants it both ways, she pays homage to
service-oriented architecture as a good idea, but she says the term
'SOA' is useless and dead. "SOA" has become a bad word. It must be
removed from our vocabulary. There is a lot in a word, and SOA is not
a bad one. In fact, she says that services are good; it's just SOA
that as a term is bad. Of course, such nuances are often obscured in
the great clammer and rush of the blogosphere.

Our take: It's good to have give-and-take and controversy. But this
has fully played out in the SOA space. It's everyone's job to build
good apps and good integrations. If you feel like discarding SOA as a
buzz word, go for it – no need to 'kill' it. The claim that "SOA is a
great failed experiment" is extraordinary hyperbole, and such
hyperbole is the enemy of getting the job done.>>

You can read this at:

http://searchsoa.techtarget.com/news/article/0,289142,sid26_gci1344323,00.html?track=NL-110&ad=682076&asrc=EM_NLN_5500380&uid=5532089

Gervas

--- In [email protected], "Gervas
Douglas" <gervas.doug...@...> wrote:
>
> Miko's SOA blog is the latest victim of Anne's blitzkrieg attack on
> SOA: http://whatevercenter.com/
>
> Gervas
>
> --- In [email protected], "Gervas
> Douglas" <gervas.douglas@> wrote:
> >
> > I knew something would happen - one glance at Anne's mischievous photo
> > in her blog should have warned us that something was on the way...
> >
> > Looking at www.soasocial.com, the following have blogged about her
> > "SOA is Dead" assertion: Mike Kavis, Kirstan, Steve, Miko, Paul Krill
> > and Jack Vaughan.  No doubt I have only clocked 10% at most of blogs
> > on this theme.  Well done, Anne!
> >
> > Gervas
> >
>


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