Email Alerts
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Message oriented middleware can handle a variety of application types
In recent years, a broader swath of applications has proved to be appropriate for message-oriented architecture. Tip
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Three tips for choosing an ESB
Deciding whether to implement an ESB, or trying to determine what kind of ESB to use? These three tips will help you choose. Tip
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Avoid getting lost on the (enterprise service) bus
Jason Bloomberg discusses how to go about implementing an enterprise service bus (ESB) with your SOA, even when that means starting at the wrong end of the initiative. Tip
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Swordfish: Eclipse's OSGi-based SOA framework
The Eclipse Swordfish projects spans three emerging technology standards: OSGi, SCA and JBI. Tip
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The seven levels of loose coupling
Ronald Schmelzer discusses the spectrum of layers in SOA and loose coupling. Tip
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Avoiding pitfalls of SOA application performance management
Building composite applications inside an SOA creates a new set of performance issues, requiring a deep understanding of service interdependencies and how this changes application management and monitoring. Tip
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Using ADO.NET and SDO for SOA data continuity
Both ADO.NET and Service Data Objects (SDO) use XML to enable data transfer between disjointed components inside an SOA, enabling developers to create all kinds of new Web services mashups. Tip
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The concrete abstraction of the business service
Jason Bloomberg discusses implementations, interfaces, and abstractions and the many different variations of what service really means. Tip
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SOA's newest product category, ESB hardware
The enterprise service bus evolved from software, but IBM is now pushing it's DataPower Integration Appliance XI50, a piece of hardware, as an ESB. Could that change the market? Tip
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Using an ESB to simplify the complexity of SOA
Maja Tibbling, lead enterprise architect at Con-Way Inc., looks into the structural benefits of using an enterprise service bus as part of an SOA implementation, particularly in how to achieve reliability, scalability, security and extensibility. Tip