Beginning of the new year a new book concerning SOA and Microsoft will be released through Apress. It is called PRO WCF: Practical Microsoft SOA Implementation.It is written by a number of professionals like Amit Bahree, Chris Peiris, Aftab Chopra, Shawn Cicoria, Nishith Pathak and Dennis Mulder. Last one is a dutch guy I met during SOA & BPM conference at Microsoft in Redmond. He’s a very nice
Thursday, 28 December 2006
New SOA Book Next Year called PRO WCF: Practical Microsoft SOA Implementation
Posted on 03:24 by Unknown
Wednesday, 27 December 2006
Content Based Routing: EAI Challenge, what's the best solution Part II
Posted on 04:02 by Unknown
In a previous post I mention an scenario, where Content Based Routing is involved. I asked a couple of people in the BizTalk space around the world about their opinion. Here are some more:Jon Flanders -Hi Steef – you could do this with your own database and a dynamic port. Or you could use a ROleLink and use the TPM functionality (BAS) to allow your customer to maintain and add partners.It
New Challenges for me
Posted on 03:09 by Unknown
I am currently involved in a project bringing a complete suite of payroll and human resource applications in one ASP framework. A Payroll/HR player in Holland wants to centralize all their apps and provide software as a service (also known as SaaS). Their ASP model consists of an authentication/authorization layer, where probably BMC® Identity Management for .Net is going to be used.More about
Monday, 18 December 2006
Content Based Routing: EAI Challenge, what's the best solution
Posted on 11:14 by Unknown
Recently I was confronted with the following scenario, where I asked the authors of BizTalk Pro for advise:I am a Microsoft BizTalk Consultant in the Netherlands and I would like to ask you a question about Content-based Routing. The question is does Content Based Routing (CBR) exists inside BizTalk Server 2006 as functionality by itself of is it a design pattern, practice as you wrote in your
Wednesday, 22 November 2006
SO BI IT or Service Orientation meets Business Intelligence
Posted on 03:52 by Unknown
Business Intelligence (BI) and Service Orientation (SO) are two architectural paradigms that have been developed independently.In the Architecture Journal 6: There is a complete article about this new concept, which draw my attention since one my BI colleague mention it.So what is about; well BI and SOA together. That's thought did not cross my mind before. Currently I am working at Inter Access
Monday, 20 November 2006
Microsoft's ESB Guidance : its finally there !!!
Posted on 08:45 by Unknown
Last week I received the ESB Guidance package from Microsoft 'The Netherlands'. Since my company is a Microsoft gold partner in the business process & integration (BPI) space I was able to get my hands on it. I got a VPC image with all the binaries installed on them (ESB Core, ESB Client, ESB Services, ESB Portal Framework, Exception handling, namespace resolution pipeline component and Java
Saturday, 11 November 2006
My Next SOA Book
Posted on 11:38 by Unknown
After browsing and reading through BizTalk 2006 Recipes I pick up another SOA book. It's called Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA): Concepts, Technology, and Design.Erl uses more than 125 case study examples and over 300 diagrams to illuminate the most important facets of building SOA platforms: goals, obstacles, concepts, technologies, standards, delivery strategies, and processes for analysis
Bootcamp Inter Access Texel 2006
Posted on 11:17 by Unknown
Last weekend my company organized a boot camp at Texel, a small island above mainland of the Netherlands. Several of my colleague’s and I presented session around a couple of topic like LINQ C# 3.0, Software Factories and SOA. I did a session about stuff I heard at the SOA Conference in Redmond. So I talked about the 3 part model expose/compose/consume and BizTalk as a cornerstone in ESB
Tuesday, 24 October 2006
BizTalk 2006 Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach
Posted on 01:36 by Unknown
After reading Understanding Enterprise SOA I have started reading a new book:BizTalk 2006 Recipes: A Problem-Solution ApproachBy Mark Beckner, Ben Goeltz, Brandon Gross, Brennan O’Reilly, Stephen Roger,Mark Smith, Alexander WestISBN: 1-59059-711-7 560 pp. Published: Sep 2006 BizTalk 2006 Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach is based on the experiences of many of the most prominent experts in the
Monday, 16 October 2006
Understanding Enterprise SOA
Posted on 11:18 by Unknown
Currently I am reading this book:Understanding Enterprise SOAEric Pulier and Hugh Taylor with foreword by Paul GaffnerThis book gives technologists and business people an invaluable and until now missing integrated picture of the issues and their interdependencies. You will learn how to think in a big way, moving confidently between technology- and business-level concerns. Written in a
Day 4 At Microsoft SOA and Business Process Conference
Posted on 11:16 by Unknown
Last day at the conference I will following these sessions:Developing Applications for the Web 2.0 Jon FlandersApplying Maximum Sustainable Throughput to a Management/Operations Strategy Scott ColestockIntegrate Your Legacy Applications with the BizTalk Adapters for Host Systems and Host Integration Server Paul Larsen, MicrosoftWeb Services Software Factory Don Smith MicrosoftDeveloping
Day 3 At Microsoft SOA and Business Process Conference
Posted on 10:24 by Unknown
Third day at Microsoft SOA and Business Process Conference I will attend the following sessions:SOA Lifecycle - Enabling Agility through Grass Roots SOA Kevin Farley & Alexander WestHigh Availability, Fault Tolerance, and Scalability with BizTalk Server 2006 Jay Lee EBI SolutionsEffective Techniques for Handling Large Messages in Service Oriented Solutions Thomas Abraham DigineerConfiguring,
Day 2 At Microsoft SOA and Business Process Conference
Posted on 07:45 by Unknown
Today I will be following all sessions on SOA track. It will kick off with a customer’s panel: SOA Success Stories, which will be interesting how companies are successful with implementing a SOA in their organization. Next will be a session of avoiding 3 common pitfalls in Service Contract design. In the afternoon there will be two sessions; one is about building an ESB on the Microsoft Platform
Tuesday, 3 October 2006
Day 1 At Microsoft SOA & Business Process Conference
Posted on 05:13 by Unknown
Today will be the first day at the Microsoft SOA and Business Process Conference. It will start off with a key-note of David Chappell called: SOA, BPM and Microsoft: A Pragmatic View. This will be very interesting to see what his view on those topics is from a Microsoft perspective. Later there will be a keynote: Real World SOA from John deVadoss. In the afternoon I will be attending a session
Saturday, 16 September 2006
Microsoft’s SOA & Business Process Conference
Posted on 09:09 by Unknown
I will be attending the Microsoft SOA & Business Conference on october 2nd through october 6th at Remond. This event is for Microsoft customers and partners to learn about new and updated information on Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), Business Process Management (BPM), and Microsoft’s own Connected Systems infrastructure. Over 4 days, attendees will learn about the strategies and
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