Published on Wednesday, January 24 2007
There’s a great article by Steve Vinoski in the Jan/Feb 2007 Internet Computing on the difference(s) between SOA and REST as architectural concepts and approaches titled “REST Eye for the SOA Guy.”
In the intro, he writes:
I’m torn in the Representational State Transfer (REST) and SOA debate  REST is extremely appealing, but my technical background is firmly rooted in the SOA camp. I’m torn in the Representational State Transfer (REST) and SOA debate  REST is extremely appealing, but my technical background is firmly rooted in the SOA camp.
In the end he comes out more on the side of “extremely appealing” than “firmly rooted.” Obviously there’s room for both, but REST comes off as much more attractive than SOA, at least in his version of the story.
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Published on Tuesday, January 23 2007
Good article from the CIO of Eastern Mountain Sports, Jeffrey Neville, about how they are leveraging what he calls “Web 2.0″ applications to improve collaboration and decision making in a retail environment: Adventures in X-Treme Web 2.0
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Published on Thursday, January 18 2007
Via CM Professionals mailing list, I came across the BBC’s Fifteen Web Principles.
They were developed as part of the BBC 2.0 project, and (maybe only because 2.0 was already in the title of the project?) they avoided calling them the BBC’s Fifteen Web 2.0 principles.
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Published on Monday, January 15 2007
When I first saw the February 2007 Dr. Dobb’s Journal, I actually thought that the “Insidious Tight Coupling” cover blurb at the bottom, in white, referred to the Microsoft Linux article.
It isn’t – as the “insidious tight coupling” article makes clear, the author is referring to “the situation where one module depends on another module having some special state, or set of string literals, but where the compiler doesn’t know.”
But it’s an easy mistake – after all, more than a few folks are convinced that something quite insidious is driving the recent agreements between the Redmond software giant and Novell, related to the SUSE Linux platform.
Michael Swaine, in the cover article “Microsoft Loves Linux: What’s With That?” points to the increasing important of virtualization, and specifically the Xen Hypervisor, which was added to SUSE Linux back in November, and argues that “Microsoft wants more than just to play in this market – it wants to control it, and that requires astute technological and legal strategy.”
Swaine plays out some of the conspiracy theories but ultimately doesn’t settle on any particular interpretation, other than to point out Microsoft obviously feels the threat of Linux, and feels that one way or another this deal helps them in that engaging that threat.
Swaine also points out that “both the Oracle move and the Microsoft-Novell deal increase the legitimacy of Linux” – but if this is what it takes to be legitimized, perhaps it would be better to stay under the radar . . .
Published on Wednesday, January 10 2007
Although there is some disagreement about whether the final word should be “crap,” Sturgeon’s Revelation says that “Ninety percent of everything is crud.”
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