On The Insider: NPH at the GQ 'Men of the Year' Awards
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

November 14th, 2006

Integration, light and simple, over the 'global SOA'

Posted by Joe McKendrick @ 1:55 pm

Categories: General, Web Services

Tags:

The other day, I gave you Nick Carr's take on the recent Web 2.0 Summit. Needless to say, he is not a fan of the concept.

ZDNet blogging colleague Dion Hinchcliffe, however, has this uncanny ability to see constructive innovation through the hype and clutter, and sees Web 2.0 in a whole different light. That is, Web 2.0 is opening the doors to Enterprise 2.0. And a big part of this, he recently wrote, is the conversion starting to take place between SOA and Web 2.0.

SOA and Web 2.0 are "two highly interrelated trends that are very focused on 1) connecting people and systems together easily, 2) making software and data available for reuse via services, and 3) building new value upon the foundation of existing information resources and IT assets."

Dion quotes IBM's Rod Smith (pictured), who talked about the mashup trend as it relates to enterprise IT. "The result?  A surprisingly close relationship between the somewhat stodgy world of service-oriented architecture (SOA) and the bustling world of consumer Web 2.0."Rod Smith, IBM

In fact, in an interview last June, Smith noted that mashups are made of the same stuff as most SOA implementations — Web services. "You wouldn't have this whole area of mashups if you didn't have [service-oriented architecture] as a backbone," he said.

Dion has described Web 2.0 as a "global SOA," a point borne out in Smith's presentation. A CTO from American Express talked about the company's experiences applying Web 2.0 "to articulate the vision of situational mashup applications, connected bidirectionally via feeds." As a result, tools such as dashboards or other situational apps "can be built in minutes instead of hours, wired together, and even be connected to Internet-based and enterprise IT resources in two directions."

In a related demo, Dion illustrates, IBM's QEDWiki team "built an entire application with phone book integration, financial data integration and charts and graphs, all then re-exposed via an API, forming yet another new service that can be shared out to the enterprise or the 'Global SOA' on the Internet." 

As another SOA-Web 2.0 observer, Rod Boothby, put it, "The idea is to try an make building a real Web based application as easy a building a spreadsheet. Instead of cells with numbers and formulas, end users get a wiki page with widgets that can be plugged together to make a new application."

Sounds an awful lot like the goal of SOA. The convergence of SOA and Web 2.0 has interesting implications for companies seeking faster and more cost effective ways to integrate their disparate silos of systems and information. As Dion observed: "Live users are still the manual integration point of our systems far too often, and now it's getting easier and easier for the average person to direct software do the integration automatically."

Joe McKendrickJoe McKendrick is an author and consultant with deep knowledge and insights regarding trends and developments in the technology industry. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


Email Joe McKendrick

Subscribe to Service Oriented via Email alerts or RSS.

Talkback

Add your opinion

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Smart Tech Expert advice on innovations in healthcare and the green technologies that make it happen. Find out more
  • Smart Business Discussion and advice on management issues that revolve around making your world smarter and more useful. More Smart Advice
  • Smart People The best and worst moves in the management and strategy trenches. Learn More