2005 in Review, 2006 in Preview |
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| 27 Dec 2005 |
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In order to put 2005 in perspective, we at SearchWebServices.com have put together a four-part Year in Review section, covering more than 90 of our top news stories from the past year. In addition, we've talked to four of the leading experts in the SOA arena about what's coming in 2006 in terms of SOA development, open source and standards development. Everything you wanted to know about SOA in 2005 and everything you need to know about SOA in 2006 is right here.
Reactivity's Nash on who controls SOA
Reactivity CTO Andrew Nash addresses what's needed in the corporate culture around SOA and explains the differences between network agents and XML appliances.
Reactivity's Nash: Get ready for the SOA deluge, part 2
In the second part of a Q&A, Reactivity CTO Andrew Nash talks about the need for policy-driven SOA, the potential of Binary XML and why this is a great time to be independent.
Microsoft's DeVadoss on what WCF brings to SOA
Microsoft's John DeVadoss believes Windows Communication Foundation will bring SOA to a whole new developer audience in 2006.
Microsoft's DeVadoss argues SOA is more than IT
John DeVadoss asserts that architecture is not the goal of SOA, that Service Component Architecture highlights the complexity of Java and data needs more attention in SOA design.
Iona's Newcomer on what Eclipse brings to SOA
Iona CTO Eric Newcomer previews what to expect from the Eclipse Foundation SOA Project and how it intends to borrow from Service Component Architecture and Service Data Objects.
Iona's Newcomer on ESBs, XML and Web services standards, part 2
Iona CTO Eric Newcomer digs into the key elements that need to emerge from open source ESBs, where standards are headed in 2006 and how XML needs to get beyond Java and .NET.
JBoss' Marc Fleury on open source in 2006, part 1
JBoss CEO Marc Fleury takes a look at how the open source software business model has evolved and what to expect in terms of service-oriented architecture development in 2006.
JBoss' Marc Fleury on SOA standards, Java and paranoia, part 2
JBoss CEO Marc Fleury explains why he doesn't like the new SCA specification, why the JCP is necessary, where his company is headed beyond Java and how paranoia keeps him going.
2005: The year SOA broke big
A year ago service-oriented architecture stood at the crossroads of promise and cynicism. Over the next twelve months it became a boom market.
Disruption 2005: Open source invades SOA
Eclipse continued to grow in importance while vendors like JBoss, IBM, Sun, BEA and Oracle deepened their open source ties.
Disruption 2005: SOA hardware and Ajax
Ajax came on like a juggernaut in the latter half of the year with almost every vendor seeking to blend it in with SOA development tools. Meanwhile, the XML networking market saw the entrance of IBM, Cisco and Intel.
SOA standards searched for maturity in 2005
A host of Web services transaction and security specifications designed to improve quality of service hit the standards track in 2005. Design and implementation specifications also arose and JBI caused a dust up among Java vendors.
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