Web Services Journal
recently interviewed Theo
Beack, Software AG's new
Chief SOA Architect.
Beack will be heading a
new SOA Competency
Center, to be based in
the Washington, DC area.
The Center will draw on
the company's 30 years of
global experience in
developing sophisticated
customer solutions in
both the mainframe and
XML data environments,
according to Beack.
Swainson: 'Let's start by
defining 'on demand.'
First, on demand reflects
what our customers are
doing with their
businesses - streamlining
their business processes
to make them more
flexible and adaptive to
new markets and
opportunities. They use
information technology as
a tool to integrate these
processes, so obviously
IT is a critical enabler
of on demand.'
Who Is David Litwack?
Litwack is responsible
for the development and
advancement of Novell's
secure Web services
strategy, a position he
assumed in July 2002
following Novell's
acquisition of
SilverStream Software, a
company for which he'd
served as president and
CEO since 1997. He is
also a member of Novell's
Worldwide Management
Committee. JDJ spoke with
him on May 21, 2004
exclusively about a range
of contemporary computing
issues.
In the interview,
conducted by Ivan
Pedruzzi, Stylus Studio
Senior Product Architect,
and editor The Stylus
Scoop, Dr. Kay provides
an update on the exciting
work being undertaken at
the W3C on emerging XML
technologies including
XSLT 2.0, XPath 2.0,
XQuery 1.0, and he shares
his insights on how these
technologies are likely
to inter-operate and work
alongside related XML
technologies such as
SQL/XML, and XML tools
and components.
With brands sold in 180
markets around the world,
British American Tobacco,
the world's most
international tobacco
company, was looking for
a way to access and
analyze data to improve
supply-chain performance.
The IT department was
charged with finding a
new approach that would
provide significant
improvements over the
traditional approach of
gathering and storing
data, transforming it
into information, and
generating reports.
Web services are moving
from the latest buzzword
to a mature and accepted
technology. Mainstream
companies such as Eastman
Chemical, Wells Fargo,
and NEC have begun
deploying significant Web
Services-Based
Integration (WSBI)
projects.
Service discovery and
identification is a
critical piece of the
overall Web services
puzzle. Existing service
architectures, such as
CORBA, JINI, and ebXML,
have all devoted
significant effort
towards making service
discovery available and
comprehensive. If Web
services is to become a
ubiquitous platform for
service oriented
computing, then the
industry will need to
create standards and
products that enable
sophisticated discovery,
identification, and
composition of Web
services.
This month WSJ focuses on
P2P architectures and
grid computing, two
topics that are gaining
momentum in our industry.
Over the past year or so
I've read many excellent
articles and books on
these topics. However,
getting a handle on what
P2P and the grid are can
be a challenge as
implementations advance
rapidly, major
technologies are
converging, and more
people are applying these
concepts to their
particular disciplines.
Web Services Journal
recently caught up with
Steve Benfield, chief
technology officer of
SilverStream Software,
for a quick look at
SilverStream's new Web
services environment,
SilverStream eXtend.
Chris Hoofnagle,
legislative counsel for
EPIC, spoke exclusively
to WSJ-IN, with more
background on EPIC's
efforts to ensure
consumer privacy online.
WSJ: Have you had any
response from the states'
attorneys general or the
FTC? Chris Hoofnagle,
EPIC: No, and we wouldn't
expect to. The
investigations are
confidential, and EPIC
would not be notified of
the investigation until
it was completed.
Having been endorsed by
virtually every
technology vendor on the
planet, Web services are
now evolving from
'feature' to 'fabric.'
They are moving from the
latest buzzword (hot new
feature) to a mature and
accepted technology
(fabric of the technology
landscape). The hype is
fading; it is no longer
interesting to develop
Web services simply as a
proof of technology, or
as an end in themselves.
Jan. 1, 2000 12:00 AM Reads: 13,657 Replies: 4
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I took the advice of a
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