22nd
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Jeff Hammond’s theme for this presentation is that as enterprise experiment with web 2.0 some successful adoption patterns are emerging. There are three ways to look at web 2.0:
Enabling technologies
Flex, Air, Silverlight, XML, Ajax, cloud computing
Core applications
Blogs, wikis, social networks, tagging, rss, mashups built on these core technologies
Behavior shifts
Information workplaces, social computing, dynamic business applications, [...]
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posted by James Taylor in web 2.0 |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I’m going to be on stage with Mike Gualtieri soon but I thought I would drop in and listen to him on the future of application development. Sadly this meant missing a session on BI but even I can’t be in two places at once. Mike’s theme is that the value of application developers in [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Innovation, News, SOA, web 2.0 |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Dean Hager from Lawson came on to follow-up on the dynamic business applications story. Dynamic means “continuous change, activity, or progress” and Enterprise Applications “suck at this” to use his words. But this is a problem as the world is changing - people change, events cause change, the business climate changes and more. He asked [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Enterprise Applications, SOA |
17th
December
2007
Posted by
James Taylor
Thomas Erl is working on a new book of SOA patterns and is looking for suggestions and input. You can read about the project on www.soapatterns.com. In particular, those of you interested in decision management might want to provide comments on the Rules Centralization pattern using the form here. If you have additional pattern suggestions, [...]
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posted by James Taylor in SOA |