Morning Coffee 76
- Dare Obasanjo sez Cool URIs Don’t
Change.
He’s got other versioning advice, but that’s the main takeaway. Good
advice that dovetails nicely with “It’s the URI,
Stupid“.
- I usually agree with Jack van Hoof’s
stuff, but I don’t agree with his
thoughts
on loosely coupled transaction processing. It’s much better than
suggesting the use of 2PC system
like WS-AT, but
when he writes that “by design every action has a compensating
action to undo the original action” I am reminded of Pat’s old post
Why I hate the phrase “Long Running
Transactions”.
Personally, I’m a fan of using the Tentative Operation or
Reservation pattern,
described
by John Evdemon. Note the lack of
a transaction coordinator in that pattern.
- Speaking of service anti-patterns, I wonder how we rationalize the
following two statements, both from Microsoft, in documents
published by my old team:
- “CRUD operations are the wrong level of factoring for a Web
service. CRUD operations may be implemented within or across
services, but should not be exposed to consumers in such a
fashion. This is an example of a service that allowed internal
(private) capabilities to bleed into the service’s public
interface.” John
Evdemon, Principles of
Service Design: Service Patterns and
Anti-Patterns,
Readings in Service
Orientation
- “It is very common for Entity Services to support a create,
read, update and delete (CRUD) interface at the entity level,
and add additional domain-speciic operations needed to address
the problem-domain and support the application’s features and
use cases.” Shy Cohen,
Ontology and Taxonomy of Services in a Service-Oriented
Architecture, Journal
11
- Ian Thomas wonders Does ERP
suck? In
a word: Yes!
😄
Seriously, I’m a strong believer in what Ian alternatively calls
“unbundling” and “disaggregation” of monolithic enterprise systems –
ERP is the most glaring example of such systems.
- Jamie Cansdale is figuring
out
how to host Silverlight’s CLR outside of the browser. He’s already
got a console runner up and running. He’s working of adding
“Test With Silverlight” option to
TestDriven.NET. You go Jamie.
Posted by devhawk.net on May 10, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged Silverlight & SOA.
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