SOA Web Services Session
Governance, Security, and Management in a Service-Oriented World - When New and Old Collide
Governance, Security, and Management in a Service-Oriented World - When New and Old Collide
Feb. 27, 2006 08:00 AM
Significant investments in the successful management and administration of many critical business systems have had mixed success over the years. In a new, more competitive age of regulation and globalization, SOA promises much in terms of business agility and efficiency, but how do we maintain visibility, control, and appropriate governance of this new and much more highly distributed service-oriented world? Most authorities in this field agree that management and security are complimentary foundations of an essential framework for SOA success, but what does that really mean and how do you achieve it? For example, how do you comply with service-level agreements and fulfill partner expectations in a Service-Oriented world? Where does governance fit in and what is its relation to these other SOA elements?
This session will examine important architectural, technical, and business principles, and make concrete recommendations concerning all of these elements of a SOA while focusing on the operational issues which are generally less well understood. What was right and wrong with previous approaches? What should be done differently and can we really afford to start completely over? We will discuss best practices, business and technical trends, and briefly discuss the importance of one particular brand new standard as part of an essential guide to making all those services really work for your business.
About Paul LiptonPaul Lipton is an Advisor and Senior Architect in CA, Inc. where he leads the CA Industry Standards and Open Source Program in the Office of the CTO. Paul has been an architect and developer of enterprise systems for over 20 years. He serves on the Board of Directors of the DMTF and the Eclipse Foundation, and has participated in many other industry organizations such as OASIS and the W3C. Paul is a founding member of the CA Council for Technical Excellence where he chairs the Emerging Technology Committee and also leads a project focused on leveraging Web 2.0 to improve research collaboration. He is also a Microsoft Most Valuable Professional and a Sun Java Champion. Paul is a highly sought-after author and speaker, and has shared his knowledge with appreciative audiences around the world covering topics such as industry standards, SOA, open source, technical innovation, enterprise architecture, social computing, virtualization, Web services, management/security, governance, autonomic computing, Web 2.0, and many other emerging technologies.