| By SOA News Desk | Article Rating: |
|
| March 28, 2007 12:15 AM EDT | Reads: |
15,330 |
Matt Quinn (pictured), SVP of product strategy for TIBCO Software, contends that many companies with large SOA deployments face two major challenges: how to promote service reuse and how to manage the complexity of a heterogeneous, distributed SOA that includes Java, .NET, and various legacy and packaged applications deployed across the enterprise.
"The solution," Quinn explains, "is to implement service virtualization to make services portable and protocol independent."
He will be giving a session on the topic at the 11th SOA World 2007 Conference & Expo, June 25-27 2007, New York City. The session will cover the different architectural components of service virtualization – mediation, deployment, governance and service management – and the standards that make service virtualization possible.
Quinn has been with TIBCO for over seven years, working a variety of key positions. As an expert in agents and highly distributed complex systems, he is often called upon to help customers solve some of their most challenging integration problems. He has written a PhD thesis on "Distributed Workflow Systems" and is currently completing a book on enterprise architectures.
11th International SOA World 2007 East Will Take Place June 24-27, 2007 in New York City
SYS-CON Events announced today that Laszlo Systems, webMethods, and Trivera Technologies joined SOA World 2007 East Conference & Expo colocated with Enterprise Open Source Conference & Expo as "charter sponsors."
Laszlo Systems is the original developer of the open source platform OpenLaszlo, and provider of Rich Internet Applications and services that advance the Web experience. OpenLaszlo is an XML-native foundation for building next generation Web applications that increase customer retention, conversion and brand loyalty. Laszlo provides comprehensive support services, education, and commercial application modules so that any company can easily make the move to Rich Internet Applications.
webMethods provides business process integration to over 1,400 of the world's largest corporations and government agencies, enabling them to achieve faster business improvements and competitive differentiation. By taking a process-centric approach to integration, webMethods allows customers to reuse their existing IT assets and achieve greater process automation and visibility.
Trivera Technologies is a leading training and consulting company specializing in advanced object-oriented, SOA/component-based, enterprise Java and Web Services. Trivera's training and consulting services enable rapid knowledge transfer and help customers accelerate project time-to-market, increase productivity, and expedite transition to all afore mentioned technologies. Trivera's extensive team of subject matter experts, business engineering consultants, experienced instructors and courseware designers brings years of practical programming experience into every classroom and custom project.
SOA World 2007 East Conference & Expo
According to industry analyst firm Gartner Group, by 2008 more than 60 percent of enterprises will use SOA as the guiding principle when creating mission-critical applications and processes. "Businesses that ignore the potential of SOA will find themselves outpaced by rivals who improve their agility and transform themselves into new kinds of enterprises," says Gartner analyst Yafim Natis.
Topics will include:
Transitioning Successfully to SOA
Federated Web Services
SOA Governance
ebXML
Orchestration
Discovery
The Business Case for SOA
Interop & Standards
Web Services Management
Messaging Buses and SOA
Enterprise Service Buses
SOBAs (Service-Oriented Business Apps)
Delivering ROI with SOA
Java Web Services
XML Web Services
Security
Professional Open Source
Systems Integration
Sarbanes-Oxley
Grid Computing
Business Process Management
Web Services Choreography
Speaker Candidates
Ideal candidates are i-Technology experts who have first-hand experience in the development and/or implementation of Web services, .NET, MX, or Java applications, XML-based technologies, and service-oriented architectures in general. .NET and Java developers involved in building, deploying, or maintaining Web services and IT/IS management involved in IT integration and related issues are also welcome.
If you have something substantive, challenging, and original to offer, you are encouraged to submit a proposal. In the proposal, please highlight previous speaking engagements including classroom or course work. Please provide at least three references with respect to speaking ability, as well as contact information that will allow us to reach you to evaluate presentation skills. Past speakers do not need to provide references.
Enterprise Open Source 2007 East Conference & Expo
In the world of Enterprise Open Source software, the code is free and open but you can pay for things such as support, packaging, and/or reliable distributions. This conference aims to help attendees navigate the choppy waters between what JBoss CEO Marc Fleury calls "the expectations/perceptions of the open source community and the reality of sustaining the kind of software and services that professional IT management can be comfortable signing off on."
Published March 28, 2007 Reads 15,330
Copyright © 2007 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
About SOA News Desk
SOA World Magazine News Desk trawls the world of distributed computing and SOA-related developments for the latest word on technologies, standards, products, and services and brings key information to you in a timely and convenient summary form.
![]() |
SOA News 02/11/07 06:13:20 PM EST | |||
Matt Quinn (pictured), SVP of product strategy for TIBCO Software, contends that many companies with large SOA deployments face two major challenges: how to promote service reuse and how to manage the complexity of a heterogeneous, distributed SOA that includes Java, .NET, and various legacy and packaged applications deployed across the enterprise. |
||||
- Performance of Java Compilers: An Empirical Study
- Java Kicks Ruby on Rails in the Butt
- Ulitzer’s Amazing First 30 Days in Public Beta
- 1st Annual Government IT Expo: Call for Papers Deadline July 15
- REA Is Where RIA Becomes the Norm
- Why an Application Grid?
- Will Ulitzer Dominate News Content on The Web? -Gartner
- Clear Toolkit 4: The Road Map
- Profiling Netbeans within Amazon EC2
- Java Persistence on the Grid: Approaches to Integration
- Performance of Java Compilers: An Empirical Study
- Java Kicks Ruby on Rails in the Butt
- Developing Rich Client Applications Using Swing - II
- The Right Time for Real Time Java
- Xpress Suite Adds Automatic Java to iPhone Conversion
- Building Better Phone Applications with SOA and Eclipse
- Initial Thoughts on IBM Acquisition of Sun Microsystems
- Ulitzer’s Amazing First 30 Days in Public Beta
- 1st Annual Government IT Expo: Call for Papers Deadline July 15
- Maximizing Java Performance with Bespoke Programming
- A Cup of AJAX? Nay, Just Regular Java Please
- Java Developer's Journal Exclusive: 2006 "JDJ Editors' Choice" Awards
- The i-Technology Right Stuff
- JavaServer Faces (JSF) vs Struts
- Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex 2 and Java
- Java vs C++ "Shootout" Revisited
- Bean-Managed Persistence Using a Proxy List
- Reporting Made Easy with JasperReports and Hibernate
- What's New in Eclipse?
- Creating a Pet Store Application with JavaServer Faces, Spring, and Hibernate








































