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Server-free architectures, .NET, vanishing IT departments: top 10 posts for 2010

By | December 23, 2010, 3:00pm PST

Summary: Here are the top 10 posts that generated the most traffic — and also discussion — in the year 2010. A common thread throughout — how much IT does a company really need these days?

We call this blogsite “Service Oriented,” and cover a lot of ground, not only with SOA, but also focusing on topics such as enterprise architecture, cloud, data management, IT management, data center operations, business process management, and event processing, to name a few.

The most popular posts here at this blogsite also run the gamut. We heard from many quarters, and here are the top 10 posts that generated the most traffic for this blogsite for the year 2010. A common thread throughout — how much IT does a company really need these days?

1 Rise of SFA, the ’server-free architecture:’ There was a time when launching a serious startup required serious capital. Seed money was required for hiring talent, marketing and promotion, office space, and for technology to make it all happen. The technology portion of the equation is suddenly diminishing, dramatically. Thanks to cloud computing and social networking resources, it now costs virtually pennies to secure and get the infrastructure needed up and running to get a new venture — be it a new business or part of an existing business — off the ground.

2 Ten examples of SOA at work, right now: Actually, these case studies were first published here in 2006, but it can be assumed that these implementations have gained more ground, generated more key business metrics, and provided more learning for both the business and technology professionals. Implementations cited took place at NASA, Harvard Medical School, Starwood Hotels & Resorts, Verizon Communications, and Fireman’s Fund. For more examples from this year, check out my last post, “Ten examples of SOA at work in 2010.”

3 .NET, great disruptor of the decade: This one stirred quite a bit of discussion, as any topic involving Microsoft is likely to do. .NET and the .NET Framework were probably just as disruptive as open source, especially to the emerging SOA space, over the past decade. Why? Because Microsoft brought service orientation to the unserved and underserved part of the market that couldn’t afford SOA.

4 Microsoft favoring HTML5 over Silverlight: reports: Another hot zone with Microsoft right in the middle, stirring things up. Reports abounded across the news channels and the blogosphere that Microsoft is shifting its emphasis away from its own Silverlight rich client environment in favor of HTML5.

5 Another view: Why IT should not be run as a business: I’m always preaching here that IT should run like a business, that it is a business, so it pained me to publish this one. But I need to present as many sides of an argument as possible. And Bob Lewis did make a compelling argument to the contrary, pointing out that well-run businesses view IT is a strategic partner to the rest of the business, “not a subservient order taker content to process work requests while accepting the blame for everything that goes wrong.” And he says, it’s wrong to view IT services as commodities that can purchased from any lowest-cost supplier — never mind security, redundancy and uptime.

6 Top 10 enterprise architecture trends, identified by Forrester: I don’t hold the fact that Forrester is an analyst firm against it — in fact, some of my best friends are analysts. And, Forrester has been right on top of the SOA game for some time now. Forrester identified 15 trends shaping enterprise architecture, led by next-gen BI taking shape, business rules processing and policy-based SOA moving to the mainstream, and SaaS and cloud-based platforms become standard.

7 Oracle sues Google: titanic clash over Java platform looms: Oracle’s Sun acqusition has had a lot of interesting fallout. One was the direction of Java and the Java Platform. In the fall, Oracle filed a patent infringement lawsuit against Google, stating that Google has violated Oracle’s patents associated with the Java platform technology within the Google Android mobile stack.

8 Cloud computing is better left to cloud vendors, not enterprises: Microsoft report: How can anyone not have an opinion on a statement such as this? And the fact that someone in Redmond said this? They also say: “The economic benefits of public clouds are getting so compelling — particularly in their ability to deal with variability — that organizations will soon have difficulty justifying why they maintain their own IT infrastructures.” Ouch!

9 The vanishing IT department: Double ouch! This plays right off the above-mentioned report on why companies shouldn’t be trying to run their own clouds. Usually, it’s Gartner that comes up with inflammatory predictions such as IT departments withering away. But in this case, it was the Corporate Executive Board  that predicted that by 2015, many IT departments will only be a quarter of their current size, and eight out of ten IT dollars going to outside service providers.

10 Passwords, security protocols cost more than they save, says Microsoft researcher: Okay, it looks like Redmond gave me a lot to post about this year. In this case, they allege that coming up with strong passwords is a waste of time — and may in fact cost more time than the cost of any potential security breach.

(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

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Joe McKendrick is an author, consultant and speaker specializing in trends and developments shaping the technology industry.

Disclosure

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is an independent consultant, editor and speaker.

Joe has performed project work (white papers, articles, blogs, research and presentations) for the following companies in the IT marketspace:

  • CBS Interactive/CNET/ZDNet (this blog)
  • ebizQ
  • Evans Data
  • Gartner
  • IBM
  • Informatica
  • IDC
  • Microsoft
  • Systinet/HP
  • Teradata
  • Unisphere Reseach, a division of Information Today, Inc.
  • WebLayers

Joe has also performed research work for the following sponsoring organizations in partnership with Unisphere Research, a division of Information Today, Inc.

  • IBM
  • Luminex
  • Noetix
  • Oracle Corp.
  • Teradata
  • Informatica
  • International Oracle Users Group
  • Oracle Applications Users Group
  • Professional Association for SQL Server
  • International DB2 Users Group
  • International Sybase Users Group
  • SHARE (IBM large systems users group)

Biography

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is an author and independent analyst who tracks the impact of information technology on management and markets. Joe is co-author, along with 16 leading industry leaders and thinkers, of the SOA Manifesto, which outlines the values and guiding principles of service orientation. He also speaks frequently on Enterprise 2.0 and SOA topics at industry events and Webcasts, and serves on the program committee for this year's SOA & Cloud Symposium in London. As an independent analyst, he has also authored numerous research reports in partnership with Unisphere Research, a division of Information Today, Inc. for user groups such as SHARE, Oracle Applications Users Group, and International DB2 Users Group. In a previous life, Joe served as director of the Administrative Management Society (AMS), an international professional association dedicated to advancing knowledge within the IT and business management fields. He is a graduate of Temple University.

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RE: Server-free architectures, .NET, vanishing IT departments: top 10 posts for 2010
THUFIR.HAWAT 1st Jan 2011
@reed@... err, in a free market, there's more than just Google...just sayin'. (Hint: amazon, database.com, etc)
fdgdfgdf
"Server-free architectures"

Eh, you just moved the servers to Google - you didn't get rid of them. Don't fool yourself.
0 Votes
+ -
Wow...
Nsaf 30th Dec 2010
funny.
I work in a medium size law firm. They looked at the cloud and laughed. The problem is you have no control. You can fire, kick, stab, kiss, or even compliment your IT guy. Try negotiating with Google once they have your dough. With the individuals using simple google tools in our environment, I found, have a greater rate of infection and keyloggers and infected google toolbars. Try calling google to get help on that. Half the time when I call any external support blackberry, Intel, HP, Dell I have to hang up one or more times until I get a reasonably intelligent tech that won't give me some hoohah about blah blah and blow me off.
When its a document that can cost you everything you own and you can't produce it because its lost in a cloud somewhere try telling it to the judge. They will nod their head, sympathize, and likely rule very heavily in favor of your opponent. Who you gonna fire, hold accountable, or sue Google? Good luck.

This is nothing more than a cloud. You could probably find reliable local vendors offering similar services and have better success.
@reed@... err, in a free market, there's more than just Google...just sayin'. (Hint: amazon, database.com, etc)

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