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Posted under EA on August 23rd, 2010 by Kyle Gabhart
The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) refers to it as architectural partitioning and the Federal Enterprise Architecture Framework (FEAF) describes it as architectural levels, but the effort of carving up Enterprise Architecture (EA) into multiple strata and then aligning those strata together as a part of a cohesive enterprise vision is an important element of […]
Posted under General on August 22nd, 2010 by Kyle Gabhart
For the past several months I have been a bit distracted and I have not made this blog a priority. There are several reasons for that:
I got married (January 1st).
I doubled the number of children living in my house when I did so (we have 6 between the two of us) .
I got swamped by […]
Posted under Cloud on February 2nd, 2010 by Kyle Gabhart
Over the past 6 months I have been working with a lot of clients that are either exploring the potential of Cloud Computing, or actively engaging in Cloud initiatives. As I have worked with these organizations and had countless whiteboard discussions with curious individuals, I have noticed some very common misconceptions regarding Cloud Computing.
Myth #1 […]
Posted under SOA on December 12th, 2008 by Kyle Gabhart
On a South Carolina campaign stop in January 2000, George Bush asked the immortal question: “Is our children learning?” Then again seven years later, Bush told a group of New York school children: “Childrens do learn.” YouTube video of both statements is available here. So I ask the question: Is our […]
Posted under SOA on December 4th, 2008 by Kyle Gabhart
In a previous post I blogged about the strong synergy between SOA and MDM. More recently, I explored the subject of service oriented data modeling (part 1 of this post) and how to resolve the inevitable conflicts that arise between your SOA view of data and your enterprise or MDM view of data. In this […]
Posted under BPM, Conference, SOA on February 5th, 2008 by Kyle Gabhart
A rose by any other name would still smell sweet, just as a strategic corporate initiative is no more or less successful due to its use of certain en-vogue terms such as Enterprise Architecture (EA), Business Process Management (BPM), and Service Oriented Architecture (SOA). I was struck by the realities of the semantic terminology game […]
Posted under Conference, SOA on November 15th, 2007 by Kyle Gabhart
I spent much of the second day talking with attendees, speakers, and SYS-CON staff about SOA, virtualization, and the conference in general. Overall, there was a general sentiment that the conference was a success and had some valuable content. One presentation from the day that really stood out was a case study from […]
Posted under SOA on August 9th, 2007 by Kyle Gabhart
I’ve been traveling and teaching a lot since the SOAWorld conference. This past week, a couple of my students challenged me on some statements that I made during the course regarding the notion that Microsoft has arrived a bit late to the SOA table. I find this particularly interesting considering the fact they […]
Posted under SOA on May 22nd, 2007 by Kyle Gabhart
It’s been over a month since I’ve posted anything. For the past several weeks I’ve been heavily engaged with clients and several public speaking engagements related to Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), Business Process Management (BPM) and Enterprise Architecture (EA). A resounding theme as of late has been the importance of aligning the business and […]
Posted under SOA on April 3rd, 2007 by Kyle Gabhart
SOA ROI is a hotly debated topic, with some claiming that an ROI cannot be determined:
“Can You Assign an ROI to SOA? Not so much.” (Ann All)
“ROI doesn’t apply to SOA” (Joe McKendrick)
That last posted generated some discussion which led Joe to post a follow-up entry: “SOA is not above ROI scrutiny, but…” I […]