This link has been bookmarked by 9 people . It was first bookmarked on 08 Aug 2006, by yuppi c.
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29 Dec 08
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31 Jan 08
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27 Dec 07
Sebastian WeberI’ve been spending the better part of the last couple of months searching high and low for good quality tools that let anyone build enterprise-quality mashups, and I can safely report here that there are only a few.
web2.0 mashup enterprise2.0 enterprise soa principles blog article enterprisemashup architecture api widget 2006
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04 Mar 07
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I've had discussions with a number of enterprise architects currently working in the industry about this and I do see a common theme in many of the IT requests they get these days. There seems to be considerable pent-up demand for smaller, custom applications in large numbers.
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I've had discussions with a number of enterprise architects currently working in the industry about this and I do see a common theme in many of the IT requests they get these days. There seems to be considerable pent-up demand for smaller, custom applications in large numbers.
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I've had discussions with a number of enterprise architects currently working in the industry about this and I do see a common theme in many of the IT requests they get these days. There seems to be considerable pent-up demand for smaller, custom applications in large numbers.
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10 Aug 06
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But why are enterprise mashups important?
I've had discussions with a number of enterprise architects currently working in the industry about this and I do see a common theme in many of the IT requests they get these days. There seems to be considerable pent-up demand for smaller, custom applications in large numbers. The solution space around large enterprise apps is increasingly well-bounded; almost all enterprises today already have their mainline IT systems well developed and evolved. The remaining IT projects are often the ones in which the investment for traditional tools and processes would not justify the return. And based on these anecdotal discussions, there seems to be a sort of Long Tail of IT software demand, something both Rod Boothby and I have been discussing this year. If true, it is just possible that there is a vast amount of untapped value left in IT yet. We just need tools to access it.

The main attraction of mashups is that they have the potential for self-service in that end-users can theoretically create them. They also perform integration in the browser. This provides a sort of safe "sandbox" where users can experiment safely with powerful tools without affecting the traditional IT development, deployment, and support processes. And presumably, enterprise mashups tools would provide automatic versioning, security, and other needed enterprise software qualities.
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