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Service-Oriented Architecture Compass: Business Value, Planning, and Enterprise Roadmap

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
Praise for Service-Oriented Architecture Compass “A comprehensive roadmap to Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA). SOA is, in reality, a business architecture to be used by those enterprises intending to prosper in the 21st century. Decision makers who desire that their business become flexible can jumpstart that process by adopting the best practices and rules of thumb described in SOA Compass.” -Bob Laird, MCI IT Chief Architect “The book Service-Oriented Architecture Compass shows very clearly by means of real projects how agile business processes can be implemented using Service-Oriented Architectures. The entire development cycle from planning through implementation is presented very close to practice and the critical success factors are presented very convincingly.” -Professor Dr. Thomas Obermeier, Vice Dean of FHDW Bergisch Gladbach, Germany “This book is a major improvement in the field. It gives a clear view and all the key points on how to really face a SOA deployment in today’s organizations.”-Mario Moreno, CIO Generali France “Service-Oriented Architecture enables organizations to be agile and flexible enough to adopt new business strategies and produce new services to overcome the challenges created by business dynamism today. CIOs have to consider SOA as a foundation of their Enterprise Applications Architecture primarily because it demonstrates that IT aligns to business processes and also because it positions IT as a service enabler and maximizes previous investments on business applications. To understand and profit from SOA, this book provides CIOs with the necessary concepts and knowledge needed to understand and adapt it into their IT organizations.” -Sabri Hamed Al-Azazi, CIO of Dubai Holding, Sabri “I am extremely impressed by the depth and scale of this book! The title is perfect-when you know where you want to go, you need a compass to guide you there! After good IT strategy leads you to SOA, this book is the perfect vehicle that will drive you from dream to reality. We in DSK Bank will use it as our SOA bible in the ongoing project.”-Miro Vichev, CIO, DSK Bank, Bulgaria, member of OTP Group “Service-Oriented Architecture offers a pathway to networking of intra- and inter-corporate business systems. The standards have the potential to create far more flexible and resilient business information systems than have been possible in the past. This book is a must-read for those who care about the future of business IT.” -Elizabeth Hackenson, CIO, MCI “Service-Oriented Architecture is key to help customers become on demand businesses-a business that can quickly respond to competitive threats and be first to take advantage of marketplace opportunities. SOA Compass is a must-read for those individuals looking to bridge the gap between IT and business in order to help their enterprises become more flexible and responsive.” -Michael Liebow, Vice President, Web Services and Service-Oriented Architecture, IBM Business Consulting Services “This book is a welcome addition to SOA literature.It articulates the business case and provides practical proven real-world advice, guidance, tips, and techniques for organizations to make the evolution from simple point-to-point web services to true SOA by addressing such topics as planning, organization, analysis and design, security, and systems management.” -Denis O’Sullivan, Fireman’s Fund Enterprise Architect Maximize the business value and flexibility of your SOA deployment In this book, IBM Enterprise Integration Team experts present a start-to-finish guide to planning, implementing, and managing Service-Oriented Architecture. Drawing on their extensive experience helping enterprise customers migrate to SOA, the authors share hard-earned lessons and best practices for architects, project managers, and software development leaders alike. Well-written and practical, Service-Oriented Architecture Compass offers the perfect blend of principles and “how-to” guidance for transitioning your infrastructure to SOA. The authors clearly explain what SOA is, the opportunities it offers, and how it differs from earlier approaches.Using detailed examples from IBM consulting engagements, they show how to deploy SOA solutions that tightly integrate with your processes and operations, delivering maximum flexibility and value. With detailed coverage of topics ranging from policy-based management to workflow implementation, no other SOA book offers comparable value to workingIT professionals. Coverage includes * SOA from both a business and technical standpoint-and how to make the business case * Planning your SOA project: best practices and pitfalls to avoid * SOA analysis and design for superior flexibility and value * Securing and managing your SOA environment * Using SOA to simplify enterprise application integration * Implementing business processes and workflow in SOA environments * Case studies in SOA deployment * After you’ve deployed: delivering better collaboration, greater scalability, and more sophisticated applications The IBM Press developerWorksA (R) Series is a unique undertaking in which print books and the Web are mutually supportive. The publications in this series are complemented by resources on the developerWorks Web site on ibm.com.Icons throughout the book alert the reader to these valuable resources. A A(c) Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved.

Service-Oriented Architecture Compass: Business Value, Planning, and Enterprise Roadmap

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Agile Business Processes, Architecture, Business, Business Applications, Business Architecture, Business Strategies, Chief Architect, Compass, Critical Success Factors, Dynamism, Enterprise, Enterprise Applications, Fhdw Bergisch Gladbach, France Service, Generali France, Mario Moreno, Necessary Concepts, Obermeier, Planning, Professor Dr, Roadmap, Rules Of Thumb, Service Enabler, Service Oriented Architecture, Service Oriented Architectures, ServiceOriented, Value, Vice Dean

Test and Analysis of Web Services

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description

The service-oriented approach has become more and more popular, now allowing highly integrated and yet heterogeneous applications. Web services are the natural evolution of conventional middleware technologies to support Web-based and enterprise-level integration.

The highly dynamic characteristics of service-oriented applications means their validation is a continuous process that often runs in parallel with execution. It is not possible to clearly distinguish between the predeployment validation of a system and its use, nor is it possible to guarantee that the checks passed at a certain time will be passed at a later time and in the actual execution environment as well.

Baresi and Di Nitto have put together the first reference on all aspects of testing and validating service-oriented architectures, taking into account these inherent intricacies. The contributions by leading academic and industrial research groups are structured into four parts on: static analysis to acquire insight into how the system is supposed to work; testing techniques to sample its actual behavior; monitoring to probe its operational performance; and nonfunctional requirements like reliability and trust.

This monograph is an initial source of knowledge for researchers in both academia and industry in the field of service-oriented architecture validation and verification approaches. They will find a comprehensive survey of state-of-the-art approaches as well as techniques and tools to improve the quality of service-oriented applications.

Test and Analysis of Web Services

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: Analysis, Applications Web, Architecture Validation, Baresi, Dynamic Characteristics, Execution Environment, Heterogeneous Applications, Industrial Research Groups, Initial Source, Intricacies, Level Integration, Middleware Technologies, Natural Evolution, Nonfunctional Requirements, Operational Performance, Oriented Applications, Oriented Approach, Service Oriented Architecture, Service Oriented Architectures, services, Static Analysis, Test, Verification Approaches

Data Processing Has Changed Over Time

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

Data Processing has changed greatly over time. While one can track the beginnings of the modern analytical computer to Charles Babbage (1791-1871), we really saw the beginning of modern day information systems during World War II when they were used as code busters. After the war, few anticipated how much computers would affect our lives. Early on even IBM thought that there would only be a handful of companies that would need a computer.

In those days, computers were massive systems based on vacuum tubes and core memory. With the advent of the integrated circuit, computer architectures took a giant leap forward. The mainframe systems of the late 1980′s evolved into Client/Server applications of the early 1990′s. In parallel, the Internet grew from a few engineer and research systems to a World Wide network. It wasn’t until an Al Gore authored bill allowing commerce to be carried out over the Internet did things really start to change. Every business, every organization, had to carve out a space on “The Net.”

The ubiquitous nature of The Internet made it the perfect way for business to have a global reach while maintaining a local presence. Soon, application vendors were making Internet based applications. Today, solution providers are exploiting service oriented architectures and BPEL to provide more agile environments in which to do business.

Today, combining Internet access with massive, inexpensive compute power, data processing has been transformed from an ancillary function of accounting departments to mechanisms by which organizations can transform and enhance their internal processing while integrating their interactions with customers and suppliers.

The key to modern day data processing is not simply the automation of some manual process. Today, business realizes that data processing, information systems, change the very processes that are used to run the business. They not only do same things more efficiently, the do thins differently.

In the past an order was printed and sent to a supplier. The order was received and, if the item was in stock, it was shipped. Items not in stock were placed on back order. Today with Supply chain integration, the entire supply chain is integrated into one network. Warehouse management software notifies suppliers when stock levels drop and order are placed. The suppliers themselves use data mining and CRM (Customer Relationship Management) software to predict ordering patterns and anticipate customer needs.

Even how businesses interact with their customers has changed. In the past, businesses used mass marketing to appeal to the greatness number of possible customers. Today, we have mass customization where businesses on a group basis provide customized goods and services.

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Filed Under: BPEL News Tagged With: Al Gore, Application Vendors, BPEL, Business Today, Changed, Charles Babbage, Client Server Applications, Computer Architectures, Core Memory, Data, Data Processing, Giant Leap, Global Reach, Integrated Circuit, Mainframe Systems, Massive Systems, Over, Processing, Service Oriented Architectures, Solution Providers, Time, Time Data, Ubiquitous Nature, Vacuum Tubes, World War Ii

Web Services and Formal Methods: 4th International Workshop, WS-FM 2007, Brisbane, Australia, September 28-29, 2007, Proceedings

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description

This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-workshop proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Web Services and Formal Methods, WS-FM 2007, held in Brisbane, Australia, in September 2007 in conjunction with the 5th International Conference on Business Process Management, BPM 2007.

The 9 revised full papers presented together with 2 invited papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 22 submissions. The papers address the application of formal methods and reasoning techniques to Web service technology, and formal theories inspired by developments in the field of Web services. The papers feature topics such as service-oriented analysis and design, formal approaches to enterprise modeling and business process modeling, model-driven development, testing, and analysis of Web services, Web services for business process management, security, performance and quality of Web services, Web service coordination and transactions, Web service ontologies and semantic description, goal-driven discovery and composition of Web services, complex event processing in service-oriented architectures, as well as semi-structured data management and XML technology.

Web Services and Formal Methods: 4th International Workshop, WS-FM 2007, Brisbane, Australia, September 28-29, 2007, Proceedings

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: 2007, 2829, Australia, Brisbane, Brisbane Australia, Business Process Management, Business Process Modeling, Composition, Conjunction, Data Management, formal, Formal Approaches, Formal Theories, International, International Workshop, Methods, Model Driven Development, Ontologies, Oriented Analysis, Proceedings, Product Description, Reasoning Techniques, Semantic Description, September, Service Coordination, Service Oriented Architectures, services, Technology Web, Web Service Technology, Workshop, Workshop Proceedings, WSFM

Security for Web Services and Service-Oriented Architectures

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description

Web services based on the eXtensible Markup Language (XML), the Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP), and related standards, and deployed in Service-Oriented Architectures (SOA), are the key to Web-based interoperability for applications within and across organizations. It is crucial that the security of services and their interactions with users is ensured if Web services technology is to live up to its promise. However, the very features that make it attractive – such as greater and ubiquitous access to data and other resources, dynamic application configuration and reconfiguration through workflows, and relative autonomy – conflict with conventional security models and mechanisms.

Elisa Bertino and her coauthors provide a comprehensive guide to security for Web services and SOA. They cover in detail all recent standards that address Web service security, including XML Encryption, XML Signature, WS-Security, and WS-SecureConversation, as well as recent research on access control for simple and conversation-based Web services, advanced digital identity management techniques, and access control for Web-based workflows. They explain how these implement means for identification, authentication, and authorization with respect to security aspects such as integrity, confidentiality, and availability.

This book will serve practitioners as a comprehensive critical reference on Web service standards, with illustrative examples and analyses of critical issues; researchers will use it as a state-of-the-art overview of ongoing research and innovative new directions; and graduate students will use it as a textbook on advanced topics in computer and system security.

Security for Web Services and Service-Oriented Architectures

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: Application Configuration, Architectures, Art Overview, Critical Reference, Description Web, Digital Identity Management, Dynamic Application, Elisa Bertino, Extensible Markup Language, Illustrative Examples, Ongoing Research, Reconfiguration, Relative Autonomy, Security, Security Aspects, Security Models, Security Security, Service Oriented Architectures, Service Security, ServiceOriented, services, Services Technology, Simple Object Access Protocol, Xml Signature
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