Survey: SOA Prominent On 2005 budgets
Michael S. Mimoso writes "A Yankee Group survey of 473 enterprise decision makers reveals that companies have put aside money for service-oriented architectures for 2005." This is a bigger deal than it sounds - if companies keep moving this away, it will mean a sea change in corporate technology usage - and change the way/why development is done. We're talking everything from SOAP stuff (ITMJ is part of OSTG) to wholesale ASP adoption like Salesforce.com.
A Yankee Group survey of 473 enterprise decision makers reveals that companies have put aside money for service-oriented architectures for 2005." This is a bigger deal then it sounds.
Why does it have to be a bigger deal before it sounds? Why does a service contract have to make any sound? Can't that step be taken out entirely? It seems to me that companies can save money that way.
i didn't get the memo on this new SOA buzzword of the week...SOA still means "start of authority" to me
That is one of the most jargon and/or marketing-speak filled story descriptions that I have ever read on /. I have absolutely no desire to waste my time looking up those acronyms in order to see if I _might_ want to RTFA.
Thanks for the great submission.
Sarbanes-Oxley Act? Shortness of Air? Sin Otro Apellido? Shadow of Amn?
Stranded.org
Soa what?
pollster: Certainly, you've set aside part of your budget for SOA deveopment. How much?
CTO, not wanting to sound stupid: Of course we are excited by the synergies present in the technology, and will continue to lead the market in SOA technologies...
And the corporate web site is up to date!
The Army reading list
This calls for Dack.com's Web Economy Bullshit Generator
Some quick examples:
reintermediate bricks-and-clicks partnerships
brand e-business action-items
orchestrate visionary interfaces
Using this tool we can quickly create:
Using SOA we can engineer wireless web services to deliver frictionless communities. It will allow us to optimize out-of-the-box portals and extend our enterprise models. If we monetize viral convergence we can synergize customized relationships and utilize matrix efficient infrastructures. SOA will enable us to reintermediate compelling e-business thus increasing our ROI. Our TCO will be minimied due to the increasing ability to drive magnetic markets.
I've just signed legislation that'll outlaw Russia forever. We'll begin bombing in five minutes.
Inigo: [looking confused] You keep using acronyms I do not think they mean what you think they mean...[looking back down] my god...his whole article is like that.
Vizzini: Whoever he is, he's obviously seen us with the slashdot factor and therefore thinks his webserver must die. You [to Fezzik] read the article. We'll [to Inigo] head straight for the first posts. Catch up when it's meta-moderated. If his webserver fails, fine; if not, the use the wiki.
Inigo: I'm going to do him in with bug-me-not.
Vizzini: You know what a hurry we're in!
Inigo: Well, it is the only way I my anominity can be satisfied. If I use my right name, the spam will come too quickly.
Vizzini: Oh have it your way.
Fezzik: [to Inigo] You be careful. People in marketing cannot be trusted.
Yo Grark
Canadian Bred with American Buttering
"A Yankee Group survey of 473 enterprise decision makers reveals that companies have put aside money for service-oriented architectures for 2005." This is a bigger deal then it sounds - if companies keep moving this away, it will mean a sea change in corporate technology usage - and change the way/why development is done. We're talking everything from SOAP stuff (ITMJ is part of OSTG) to whole sale ASP adoption like Salesforce.com."
473 enterprise decision makers? How many best-of-breed synergized Libraries of Congress is that?
Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.
Just last night my buddy down the street said the CEO of their company just showed up in the office and said he had been researching things for awhile and was sold on the SOA architechure, and they're moving all their old VB/COM+ code to C#/.NET
I have a feeling this is what the legendary TPS report looks like. But they left off the cover sheet.
Yeah... do what the rest of us do... put the link in your sig!
Maybe if they did a little more of the Yankee thing and a little less of the Group thing, they wouldn't catch any SOAs.
Particularly for the guys riding with them on the bus.
sulli
RTFJ.
Thanks to Slashdot, salesforce.com is now dead in the water. It's almost ironic that I read slashdot instead of working becuase slashdot killed one of the tools I need to do my job.
Using SOA we can engineer wireless web services to deliver frictionless communities. It will allow us to optimize out-of-the-box portals and extend our enterprise models. If we monetize viral convergence we can synergize customized relationships and utilize matrix efficient infrastructures. SOA will enable us to reintermediate compelling e-business thus increasing our ROI. Our TCO will be minimied due to the increasing ability to drive magnetic markets.
Holy crap!! That's my company's mission statement! I think I just shifted a paradigm in my pants.
Dear Mr. Mimoso,
I am writing to you on behalf of the Center for Really Annoying Acronym People (CRAAP). We here at CRAAP maintain a full Acronym Database (AD) of to monitor Total Acronym Usage in Single Paragraphs (TAUSP). Using our Acronym Checking System (ACS), we establish and attempt to stamp out Acronym Overuse and Abuse Situations (AOAS). Our current safetly limits as defined by OSHA and the WHO is set at 2.
After doing a TAUSP check on your paragraph using our ACS to compare against our AD, we discovered your paragraph to be an AOAS, and thus in violation of CRAAP, OSHA and WHO standards. This C&D letter is official notice to cease all AOAS activities imediately. Further actions will require legal penalties.
Thank you.
-Farley A. Kern-Edwardo
CEO, CFO, CIA, ACU, TFO, FPS, POS
CRAAP