Mashup softwares
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It's just that I now no longer work for a company JackBe perceives as a competitor.
#MASHUP SOFTWARES FREE#
I'd like to say that my razor sharp reasoning finaly convinced JackBe that free and open access to their technology is the best marketing strategy, but it wouldn't be true. You can read my requests here, here and here. We've gone a round or two in the past, with JackBe refusing me access, and me swearing that I would give them a fair review.
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Sure some of the Big IT SOA projects may be on hold, but don't assume that Big IT owns all the action. So take what Gartner says with a grain of salt. And what they don't know, they can't blab to Gartner. So while I completely believe that Big IT departments are slowing down in their implementation of Big SOA projects, I don't believe for a minute that these same organizations aren't expanding their use of SOA. In two of the three cases it's probable that I was the only person who knew the underlying architecture of the solution was services oriented. We didn't embark on an orgy of service writing to SOA-enable myriad legacy systems.
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In all three cases we didn't buy expensive middleware to run the software. However, if you were to ask the IT departments of these organizations about the projects, they would not have tagged them as SOA.īecause these weren't 'SOA projects,' they were business initiatives whose solutions happened to make use of SOA.
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I personally have worked on three projects over the past few months that were absolutely based on a services architecture.
#MASHUP SOFTWARES FULL#
Unfortunately, the success of SOA in the enterprise, at least Big SOA, is not a given.īut these results don't even come close to telling the full story. Given today's economic uncertainties, Big IT isn't going to spend lots of money on big IT projects that don't have an established track record for success. I'm guessing they talked to IT departments and asked, “So, what are your spending plans for SOA?” and probably, “Have you already adopted SOA within your organization?” Those aren't bad questions, but I think we could all have predicted the results. Knowing Gartner from the past, however, I can make some guesses. That's too bad because I can't look at the methodology used to gather the research. Unfortunately, I no longer have direct access to the Gartner research (One of the things about leaving my former employer that I will miss the most.) so I have to comment only on the secondary source, the above mentioned article. In 2008, this was cut by more than one-half, down to 25 percent from 53 percent in 2007, while the number of organizations with no plans to adopt SOA more than doubled from 6 percent in 2007 to 16 percent in 2008. Since the beginning of 2008, there has been a dramatic fall in the number of organizations that are planning to adopt SOA for the first time. I just read a Government Technology article stating that Gartner says there is a dramatic decrease of organizations planning first-time SOA projects.