Morning Coffee 121
- My daughter had her tonsils & adenoids out on yesterday. It was a
routine procedure and it went by-the-numbers, but any parent will
tell you it’s hard to see your kid in a hospital bed.
- Given the previous bullet, I’m not at the SOA/BPM
conference for the big
announcement.
Don’t worry, there’s lots of other folks covering the news.
- It was a crappy sports weekend in the Pierson house. Va Tech
snatched defeat from the jaws of
victory,
Southern Cal never led at
Oregon, the
Capitals
lost
twice,
and the Redskins got blown out by the
Pats. At
least the Caps won big
yesterday in
Toronto.
- Speaking of the Capitals, Peter Bondra retired
Monday.
I still think it’s a
travesty
that he didn’t spend his whole career in DC, but I’ve made my
peace with
it.
- Nick Malik has a great
series
on business operations models and how they apply to SOA. Regular
readers should be unsurprised that I favor low standardization,
though I can see the value of high integration. That makes the
Coordinated Operating Model my fav, though I can see the benefit of
the Diversified Model as well. I can’t wait to read what Nick has to
say on changing models.
- Speaking of Nick, I’m doing a roundtable with him on “Making SOA
Work in the Enterprise” @ the Strategic Architect Forum. Should be
fun. Sorry for the lack of linkage on this, but it’s an invite-only
event.
- Jezz Santos has a new series of white
papers
on building software factories. First up “Packaging with Visual
Studio
2005”
- Aaron Skonnard has a new
whitepaper
on using the WCF LOB Adapter SDK with BTS 2006 R2. I’ve been
building one of these things recently, so I’m looking forward to
checking that out. (via Sam
Gentile)
- Tim Ewald looks at Resource Oriented Architecture (when did ROA
become a TLA?) and
wonders
“what if your problem domain is more focused on processes than
data?” I wonder that all the time. (via Jesus
Rodriguez)
- It’s not just durable messaging – Libor
Soucek also
disagrees
with my
opinions
on centralized control. I agree 100% with Libor that centralized
management would make operation’s lives “much, MUCH easier” as he
puts it. However, that doesn’t make it feasible at any significant
scale. Furthermore, I wouldn’t describe an approach that requires
that “all services adopt [the] same common management interface” as
“pragmatic”. Frankly, just the
opposite.
Posted by devhawk.net on October 30, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged BizTalk, Family, REST, SOA, Software Factories, Washington Capitals & WCF.
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