Classic!

Mark.


On 8 Jan 2009, at 22:42, Gervas Douglas wrote:

<<REST met its demise on January 1, 2009, when it was wiped out by the
catastrophic impact of the economic recession. REST is survived by its
offspring: mashups, SaaS, Cloud Computing, and all other architectural
approaches that depend on the web.

REST had begun to gain some traction in 2008 as the "next big thing"
in technology, promoted by vendors, analysts and champions as being
the only way forward, often by the same people who had promoted both
EAI and Web Services as the only way forward. The economic downturn
however has led to people looking at REST as nothing more than a new
technology driven fad that was disconnected from the daily problem of
a profitable business. Proponents would laud Google, Amazon and a
small number of new startup companies as being the example that all
the old crusty companies should follow.

These old crusty companies however have heard it all before, both from
the .com boomers who were meant to replace them and from the
technology vendors who have shipped them varying degrees of snake-oil
over the year. Fortunately all is not doom and gloom for REST as these
old crusty companies are doing exactly what they did with .com and
looking at what they can do to drive down costs and increase
profitability by using the web. As REST proponents shout about
PUT/DELETE/POST and GET and whether anything from a browser can truly
be "RESTful" because it doesn't have DELETE then the business users
are looking at the Web, and more especially the services delivered via
the Web as an excellent way of managing their IT costs.

Integrating these new Web delivered services into their enterprise
often means using exactly the approach that REST proponents advise,
but it is not REST that is important it is the Service. REST vainly
tried to make itself the thing that people should care about but the
sad reality was that its role was simply in helping people connect to
the services that they use.

Already REST advocates are leaving the funeral a promoting the "web
centric view" as being the only way of the future, but the crusty old
companies continue to operate successfully often using systems that
predate the web and chuckle at the cute naivety of these technology
prophets.

Surviving REST are a series of technologies that at their core are
about using the principles of REST hidden away in their dark hearts
like a secret that must not be told. Mashups and SaaS often rely on
REST but proclaim instead the business benefits, the productivity
gains or the business service that they deliver. The biggest child of
REST is the Web, it shouts as a colossus across the globe a shiny
beacon of light which proclaims the success of its heritage, but
no-one knows or cares about its parentage only about its usefulness.

So RIP REST the business never really knew you at all.

With deference to Anne>>

You can read this at:

http://service-architecture.blogspot.com/

Gervas




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