Recently in Microsoft Category

This article should have started "sitting here at the Ballmer's keynote at Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Conference in Denver". Instead, I'm writing it from my home office a day late before I head back up.

Before I start I need to point out that I work with Microsoft in their partner program. I'm committed to that. Microsoft technologies and products play a big part in the enterprise and will continue to do so. It's not going away. Microsoft often have some "negative" things to say about certain products etc. of their partners so I think it's okay for me to be critical if it's constructive and can lead to better products. (Also see the disclaimer about these being my opinions and not that of my company on the right ;-)


IONA and Microsoft

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Recently I've been working on IONA's partnership with Microsoft. That has been keeping me very busy. Trips to Redmond, Nashville and Copenhagen for various events, and lots of other activities.

IONA and Microsoft have a history. IONA has always recognized the value of Microsoft in the IT organizations of the worlds most successful corporations. Back when people were talking about COM Vs CORBA in the 90s, IONA recognized the opportunity to bridge both technologies. IONA understood that Microsoft dominated the desktop in large enterprises (OS/2 was still around but declining). IONA built COMet as a very successful COM/CORBA bridging technology. In my opinion that product helped both companies considerably. Today, as both companies roll out more SOA technologies and products, it is important for us to partner.

IONA continues to help bridge Microsoft based applicaitons and services with non-Microsoft based applications and services today with Artix and Artix Connect. IONA has been working to help integrate with Microsoft products such as Connected Services Framework (CSF) and Customer Care Framework (CCF) - see our Microsoft partner page for more details.

Of course there is also a lot of cooperative activity with Microsoft in the various WS-* standards bodies and working groups. And IONA has participated in interoperability events and plugfests to help ensure that our products interoperate. As new products from IONA and Microsoft come to market, IONA is making sure that we continue to interoperate and integrate with Microsoft.

Many of you know me as a Mac guy. Well I just got a new Dell to help me focus on some of my Microsoft activities. More on that later.

I thought it would be useful for some people if I gave a brief overview on what my take is on JBI, WCF and SCA. Remember this is my take. Research it for yourself using the links provided.


WS-Policy WG

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I've had the privilege of working with the WS-Policy Working Group (WG) at W3C over the last few months. I know, it may seem hard to believe that working on a standards body working group is a privilege, and often it does seem like a chore, but there are several reasons for why I feel this way.

Firstly, I'm gaining new experience; experience of standards body processes. It's always a privilege to learn something new. And secondly, these are a smart bunch of people. At times some of the debate seems trivial but very smart people are putting their minds together in order develop some standards that will make Web services more interoperable with more advanced and rich features in the future.

Companies like Microsoft, BEA, Sun Microsystems, IONA, SAP, Sonic Software, Nokia, IBM, Nortel, Adobe, webMethods, etc. invest lots of resources to these standards bodies (WS-Policy Participants) Some of the people are in several working groups and basically have built a career just working on standards,. And it is certainly not a cushy number. These people work hard on some very tedious material! It can do you head in!

I am an infant in this world. Though I have lots of enterprise computing experience and interoperability experience I feel like a complete novice. I'm fortunate to have landed with a very civil bunch who are gracious at bringing me up to speed.

Now there are many times that this sort of working group activity will do my head in. Bickering over the semantics of a word or the usage of a word or the absence of a word is not how I'd like to spend my day. But I've come to appreciate what can happen when ideas and standards are ambiguous. Chaos can ensue and perfectly good initiatives can die.

I'm hoping to pull post an article giving an overview of WS-Policy. Stay posted.

This week the WG had a face-to-face in Bellevue, Washington. I finally got to meet the people I've been talking to on conference calls every week for the last few months. We got to find out a little more about each other - not just our views on WS-Policy. Bellevue/Seattle was beautiful when I arrived but turned ugly from Wednesday. It was wet like Ireland. We did have a wonderful meal at the Seastar restaurant. I'd recommend it.

Who is IPBabble

William Henry IP Babble is the personal blog of William Henry.

William has 20 years experience in software development and distributed computing and holds a M.Sc from Dublin City University. He is currently working in the office of CTO at Red Hat on the MRG product. This weblog is not funded by Red Hat.

Posts are intended to express independent points of view, but understand that there is probably a bias based on the influence of working with standards based middleware for over a decade. (See disclaimer below)

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Disclaimer

The views expressed in this blog are solely the personal views of the author and DO NOT represent the views of his employer or any third party.

About this Archive

This page is an archive of recent entries in the Microsoft category.

IONA is the previous category.

MRG is the next category.

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