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Todays Featured Content:

Service Oriented Virtualization

SOA and Virtualization are currently considered to be two separate disciplines, but they no longer need to be. SOA offers the enterprise the benefits of increased agility and cost efficiency in terms of application development, reuse, and making connections across heterogeneous applications and business partners

iTKO LISA Combines SOA Monitoring with Advanced Test Execution Capabilities

Native test interaction with leading system metrics dashboards and reporting environments provides improved control over performance and reliability.

For SOA, The Future of Quality is Federated

This paper will refer to government organizations as a case study on SOA Governance. However, architects and developers in the business computing arena can draw valuable lessons from the complex integration and quality challenges faced by federal agencies.

iTKO LISA 4 Release Revolutionizes SOA Quality with Virtualized Services and Business Process Testing Features

LISA's Evolution Mitigates IT Risk through SOA Testing, Integration Support and Policy Validation

iTKO, Inc., the leading provider of testing solutions for SOA (Service-Oriented Architecture) software, announced the availability of the new version of its flagship product suite, iTKO LISA 4 SOA Testing and Validation. LISA expands upon iTKO's delivery of the Three C's of testing - complete, collaborative and continuous - by adding key functionalities that mitigate the business risk of ever-increasing change and complexity in enterprise IT.

Featured Content provided by iTKO

Cutting Through the Confusion of Web Services and SOA Management

13th Jan 05:

There are so many definitions of Web services management and SOA management. What does this all mean to the IT leaders and architects who are trying to plan long-term for an enterprise SOA that is practical, reliable, and secure?

One thing that is still amazes me is that I find myself talking to technical journalists these days. Many journalists are interesting and knowledgeable people, but I sometimes find myself surprised that they would want to talk to a pony-tailed techie like me. Maybe there is a shortage of glib-tongued corporate spokespersons, but who am I to complain?

Anyway, I was recently asked by one such journalist to comment upon the challenge of enabling SOAs to live up to their promise. As you probably know, an SOA can make it much easier for automated business processes to be valuable and dynamic – rapidly adjusting to changes in business conditions and collaborating with other segments of the business organization, partners, suppliers, customers, and even regulators. Of course, all of that potential benefit only counts if it can be depended upon. So, in my interview the subject of SOA management came up (surprise!).

SOA and Web services management is certainly an important part of what this blog is all about. That’s part of the confusion these days. There are so many definitions of Web services management and SOA management. Moreover, the very nature of the potentially manageable entities that inhabit the SOA continues to change. A couple of years ago, ESB (Enterprise Service Bus) was not yet a name on the marketing hit parade. As the term becomes overextended and overused, people are resorting to other concepts like fabric or framework.

What does this all mean to the IT leaders and architects who are trying to plan long-term for an enterprise SOA that is practical, reliable, and secure? How can we achieve these goals if the entities we must manage and secure seem to be shifting in the marketing wind? Is it sufficient to manage at the service or operation level, or will we ultimately need to do more? These are some of the questions we will explore. To me, this blog is not about my pontificating on a particular vision of management (although I do reserve the right to “pound the pulpit” a little). It’s a chance for us all to respect and learn from each other. OK, so I’m idealistic. That goes with the pony tail!

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By the way, what I mean by SOA management is many important aspects of management, including security management, systems management, life-cycle management, and so on. My personal definition includes all of the above categories and more – although that doesn’t necessarily mean you must implement all these categories of SOA management at the same time.

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More to follow…

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Disclaimer: This weblog does not represent the thoughts, intentions, plans or strategies of my employer. It is solely my opinion.

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