--- In [email protected], Anne Thomas Manes <atma...@...> wrote: > > An organization with strong leadership, time, and talent is likely > to be successful with SOA. (Budget is less important, although > certainly helpful.) What other architectural style would you > recommend in place of SOA to attain flexibility?
IMO, if one has strong leadership and talent, the architectural style almost doesn't matter. What matters is having an architecture (a plan) driven by business aspects and following the plan. Adjustments to the plan need to part of the plan too. :-) ... > > I still believe that SOA (or perhaps we should just call it "good > architectural practices") is critical going forward. The fierce > economy makes agility more important now than ever. We agree that "good architecture" is something that is key. We may differ on the importance of an architecture being SO. -Rob
