This link has been bookmarked by 20 people . It was first bookmarked on 26 Feb 2007, by Orlin Monad.
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Scott LeslieService-oriented architecture (SOA) might have a role to play, if any of the architecture astronauts pushing it come down to earth long enough to explain what they're doing.
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Put a fork in it; they're done WS-* (pronounced WS-splat) has peaked. Even a derailed train has a lot of momentum, so people will still be talking about Web services in 2007. However, nobody will be listening. Enterprises have absorbed as much Web services machinery as they're able to stomach. Web Services Description Language (WSDL) and SOAP 1.2 are the end of the line. Many enterprises won't even get that far. WS-Choreography, WS-Transport, WS-Reliability, WS-Security, WS-Resource, WS-ServiceGroup, WS-BaseFaults, WS-Messaging, WS-KitchenSink, and WS-AreYouEvenStillReadingThis won't leave the station. There is a limit to how much complexity any organization can manage, and WS-* has long since exceeded that threshold. Instead, look for the emergence of Plain Old XML (POX). People will start (in many cases, continue) sending XML documents over HTTP. Authentication, caching, and reliable delivery will be managed using the built-in functionality of HTTP. Applications will be hooked together with a mixture of XSLT, XProc, duct tape, and spackle. Developers will give up on the idea of assembling services and systems without manual configuration (a dream most of them never bought into in the first place). Service-oriented architecture (SOA) might have a role to play, if any of the architecture astronauts pushing it come down to earth long enough to explain what they're doing.
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14 Feb 07
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