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Issue 1, 2006

In This Issue:

FEATURE

NEWS CONFERENCES

EVENTS

THE WEB

OTHER
FEATURE

Achieving Business Agility through Model-Driven SOA
      by Dr. Chris Harding, The Open Group

Service-oriented architectures (SOA) are touted as the key to business agility, especially when combined with a model-driven approach. Model-Driven Architecture (MDA) is a well-developed concept that fits well with SOA, but until now it has been a specialized technique that is beyond the scope of most enterprises. Can it be made simpler and more accessible, to become a widely used enabling technology for SOA? With a semantic approach, the answer may well be “Yes”.

The practical benefits of SOA are being increasingly recognized in many industries and applications of Information Technology. For example, Rusty Foreman, Exploration and Production SOA Program Manager for BP, says that the move to so-called "smart" oil and gas fields, with real-time collection and analysis of information driving real-time operational changes, has significant financial benefit, and SOA eliminates the traditional “spaghetti” architecture that requires many interconnected systems to solve a single problem.

Rusty adds that SOA provides a bridge between the business and technical worlds, enabling customers to talk about what they really need. But understanding requirements is just the first step towards business agility. In a truly agile enterprise, the IT infrastructure is aligned with the business structure and it can easily be adapted to meet business needs. The promise of SOA is that this can be achieved by business people who can configure and orchestrate the SOA services.

This implies that the business people have a model of the enterprise services, that they configure the model to reflect business needs, and that this translates directly to the IT implementation, ideally automatically. Such a model-driven approach is well suited to SOA, because the basic architectural building blocks are services, which can be described in a formal language such as the Web Services Definition Language (WSDL). As architecture guru Rakesh Radhakrishnan of Sun Microsystems says, the technologies behind MDA help translate high-level models to an entire IT infrastructure, which allows for the creation of SOA that is decoupled from the lower level platforms and infrastructures.

The Object Management Group (OMG) has defined a number of standards for MDA, covering the definition of models and the exchange of model information. But they are not easy reading. The Meta-Object Facility Specification, which contains the basic model description definition, runs to over 350 pages, and explains in its conceptual overview that “the classical framework for metamodeling is based on an architecture with four metalayers”. It takes a good brain and considerable dedication to get beyond this point. MDA requires intelligent, highly trained architects, and also specialist technology. Good architects are hard to come by, and specialist technology can be expensive. Small wonder that MDA is not widely used in enterprises today.

But can MDA be made simpler and more accessible? There is reason to believe that it can. Enterprise architect David Houlding has shown how to model SOA using the freely available open source ontology editor Protégé. With this tool, he implements a knowledge base that represents a concise, high-level model of the metadata forming the big picture of the enterprise, enabling knowledge mining to support accurate proactive analysis and planning. Similar techniques could be used to couple the formal service descriptions to the high-level model of an SOA.

The semantic approach to SOA implementation is gaining momentum. According to Sandra Rogers, who is Program Director for SOA, Web Services, and Integration with IDC, as configurations become more complex, the need to track related sets of services that form solutions is critical, and a significant amount of metadata needs to be captured throughout the development lifecycle. Metadata is at the foundation of SOA. Germany’s Entory Group, which provides IT consulting and systems integration to financial services firms, recently adopted a solution based on an SOA repository in which every system module can store metadata in a standard XML format, facilitating service re-use. This solution delivered impressive results, reducing costs by more than 50% and credit management cycle times by more than 70%.

The recent announcement by IBM, Microsoft and SAP that their UDDI Business Registry will close, highlights the shortcomings of UDDI, at least for public web services registries. Against this background, the advantages of the more flexible semantic-based SOA registries and repositories are becoming more and more evident.

As with MDA, there is a perception that semantic technology is a specialist area. Use of philosophical terms such as “ontology” - even the term “semantics” itself – tends to reinforce this perception, and the technology is not easy to master. But there is plenty of free software (such as Protégé) and the tools available for use with the semantic web. This is crucial, because it enables people to experiment and learn easily and at low cost, and a growing community of people is doing just that. As the number of users grows, ways of simplifying the technology will appear, and better understanding will result. Semantic technology will become something that ordinary IT architects, in all kinds of enterprises, can and do use as a matter of course.

In the USA, the General Services Administration (GSA) is leading the way with OSERA (Open Source eGovernment Reference Architecture) – an architecture that will combine MDA, SOA, and the Semantic Web. Corey Casanave, president of Data Access Technologies Inc., which is helping the GSA to develop OSERA, says that the Semantic Web will enable publication of re-usable artifacts. He says that one of the dirty little secrets about MDA is that there are too many ways to talk about the same thing, with redundant and conflicting semantics, but the Semantic Web provides a great way to publish models as Web services.

SOA promises business agility through user configuration and orchestration of services. This can be achieved without MDA, but only through a manual configuration process. MDA automates that process, and the combination of SOA and MDA is what is needed for real agility. A semantic approach makes MDA simpler and more accessible, and improves component re-use. The Semantic Web standards mean that tools can be interoperable, while the Semantic Web itself can be a global repository for shared artifacts. Semantic modeling is the key to success for model-driven SOA.

Currently, enterprises implementing SOA often identify semantic interoperability as a problem. Perhaps, if they make semantics their starting point, they will find that they have the solution to achieving business agility through SOA.

For more information, please contact Dr. Chris Harding

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NEWS

Press reports on IT Architect Certification

SAP INFO interviews The Open Group's Allen Brown: IT Architect … Profession of the Future
SAP INFO online interviewed Allen Brown, The Open Group’s President and CEO, and Graham Bird, The Open Group’s Vice President of Marketing. In the interview, the executives addressed the role of IT Architect in integrating and coordinating the IT systems within and between enterprises, discussed The Open Group’s skills- and experience- based IT Architect Certification program, and shared their vision for the IT Architect profession.
more read the article

Software Development Times: IT Architect Certification Standards by IBM’s Andras Szakal
Andras speaks about the evolution of the role of IT Architect, and the need to recognize IT Architecture as a profession. He emphasizes that IT decision makers need people with demonstrable practiced skills and a track record, and welcomes The Open Group’s IT Architect Certification program
.more read the article

IBM developer Works’ Architecture Zone: Understand The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) and IT architecture in today's world
The IBM developerWorks Architecture Zone features an article introducing The Open Group, TOGAF, and ITAC to the IBM worldwide developer community, which numbers in the millions. You can read the comments of IBM’s Andras Szakal and David Jackson.
more read the article

 

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Lottery Insights showcases launch of NASPL Bar Code Certification Program
In a major cover story, Lottery Insights showcased the launch of NASPL Bar Code Certification Program, which is designed and operated by The Open Group. Presenting the launch to their lotteries audience, the magazine emphasized the value of standards and certification.

Congratulations to the NASPL team on this success!

Rmore read the full article

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The Open Group in the Media

The Open Group in the press:

Press releases:

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Certification News

IT Architect Certification News

  • IT Architect Certification Program Accreditation 
    The Open Group is pleased to announce that IBM’s IT Architect program has been accredited as conforming to The Open Group's IT Architect Accreditation Requirements.
    Register: http://www.opengroup.org/itac/cert/acp_prodlist.tpl?CALLER=cert_archdir.tpl
  • Direct Certification - Master Certified IT Architects
    The Open Group is pleased to announce the certification of the following individuals as Master Certified IT Architects:
    Johan Bruynseels, EDS; Andreas Buzzi, Credit Suisse; Florian Generalao, EDS;
    Mateen Greenway, EDS; Stephen Lupo, GTECH Corporation; Vijay Seetharaman, EDS; Jason Uppal, QR Systems Inc
    Register: http://www.opengroup.org/itac/cert/cert_archlist.tpl
About the IT Architect Certification Program: http://www.opengroup.org/itac/

TOGAF Certification News

The number of TOGAF 8 Certified Professionals is now close to 900. Current status of TOGAF Certified products, individuals, services, and tool support:

  • TOGAF 8 Certified - 868 Registered Individuals
  • TOGAF 8 Training - 10 Registered Products from 8 Companies
  • TOGAF 8 Professional Services - 6 Registered Services from 6 Companies
  • TOGAF 8 Tool Support - 3 Registered Products from 3 Companies

The full register is available online

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TOGAF 8 Standard Courseware Certified
The Open Group has registered TOGAF 8 Standard Courseware as conforming to the TOGAF 8 Training Product Standard

see the register

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Messaging Forum re-launches The Message
The Message is the online journal of the Messaging Forum, available free of charge to subscribers. The latest version published in January 2006 focuses on the S/MIME Secure Messaging Certification Program. .
subscribe
access The Message

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The Open Group’s Messaging Forum Offers S/MIME Secure Messaging Architecture Training
The Open Group Messaging Forum is offering three training events in support of the S/MIME Secure Messaging Certification program.

  • Münster, Germany (in partnership with Noventum Consulting) - Thursday/Friday April 6-7, 2006 (This course will be delivered in German)
  • Washington, DC - Wednesday/Thursday April 26-27, 2006

The objective of these courses is to provide the knowledge, awareness and understanding of secure messaging (using S/MIME and associated standards) necessary to be able to design, deploy and configure secure e-mail systems in conformance to The Open Group S/MIME Secure Messaging Architecture.

more details and how to register

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Test suite for PSE52 Real-time Controller profile VSPSE52
The Open Group is pleased to announce the first general availability release of its test suite for the IEEE Std 1003.13-2003 PSE52 Real-time Controller Profile. This test suite will be used to support the forthcoming POSIX(R): Certified by IEEE and The Open Group PSE52 Profile Certification Program

For further information on the test suite see: http://www.opengroup.org/testing/testsuites/vspse52-2003.html

For information on licensing, please contact Birgit Hartje at: b.hartje@opengroup.org .

further information on the test suite
for information on licensing, contact Birgit Hartje

Top

Spotlight on recent publications – Guide to Security Architecture in TOGAF ADM
The White Paper focuses on security considerations that need to be addressed in the TOGAF ADM for the guidance of enterprise architects and system designers. It was developed by The Open Group Security Forum and Members of The Open Group Architecture Forum. Its primary purpose is as input to the Architecture Forum, for integrating security considerations into their development of the next version of TOGAF (designated TOGAF9). It will also be of value to system architects and designers who include information security considerations in their designs.

order

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CONFERENCES

Join us in Washington, DC at the Architecting to the Edge™ conference
April 24-26, 2006
Location: Hilton Crystal City in Arlington, VA
In parallel with Member meetings, April 24-28, 2006
Co-located with Convergence of Semantic Naming and Identification Technologies Conference, on April 27, 2006

In today’s real-time world, getting accurate information into the hands of the ‘edge user’– be they military first responders, field sales representatives, or stock traders– is increasingly important. Occurrences of threats such as terrorism, natural disaster, and extreme weather represent a major challenge for IT professionals, forcing them to face the convergence of traditional real-time and non-real-time systems.

Systems at the edge – typically based on highly distributed infrastructure and interaction of a large number of services – need to be predictive and dynamic, highly fault-tolerant, and have the capability to operate in real time; from gathering data for analysis, review, and response to disseminating information to end users. The conference will address business and technical requirements of ’edge’ systems, discuss effective solutions, review best practices and success stories, and demonstrate the latest tools.

Join industry and public sector experts to explore the key issues, business and technical challenges, and latest advances of architecting to the edge, getting the right information, to the right people, at the right time. Take part in three days packed with informative sessions and highly practical workshops, network with peers, and learn how architecture needs to evolve to address the increasing demands of ‘edge’ systems.

Discuss dynamic Service Oriented Architectures (SOA) in both business and military settings.

Keynote:
Dawn Meyerriecks, Vice President for Strategic Development in the AOL products organization, and Government Computer News' Department of Defense “Person of the Year” for 2004

program
more information

The Open Cannes Awards to Celebrate The Open Group’s 10 th Anniversary
At the conference, we will also celebrate The Open Group’s 10 th anniversary - join us for The Open Cannes Awards, a magical evening of awards, dinner and laughter on Monday, April 24 at 7:30pm
more information .

Co-located Event: Convergence of Semantic Naming and Identification Technologies Conference
The Open Group and the Federal Semantic Interoperability Community of Practice (SICoP) will jointly present the Convergence of Semantic Naming and Identification Technologies Conference, on April 27, 2006 at the Hilton Crystal City in Arlington, VA. The conference will address the candidate semantic naming and identification standards (such as RDF/OWL and the Semantic Web, Ontologies, UDEF, and ISO/IEC 11179) and example use cases (such as RFID, IPV6, and the National Cancer Institute Cancer Data Standards Repository). At the conclusion of the day’s events, a panel of the speakers will address the question of whether convergence of these semantic naming and identification standards and technologies is possible or practical.

Top


Overview of the IT Architecture Practitioners Conference in Barcelona, Spain
January 23-25, 2006
Over 300 attendees joined The Open Group in Barcelona to discuss the latest developments and trends in the IT Architecture area, get information on what works and what does not, share insights, and discuss how to make the most of their IT budgets and help their companies to reach their goals.

The conference was opened by The Open Group’s President and CEO, Allen Brown.

The Monday sessions included presentations from Hewlett Packard’s Len Fehskens on the geography of enterprise architecture; Capgemini’s Stuart Crawford on the service oriented enterprise, and Gartner Group’s Brian Burke on enterprise architecture. A joint presentation about practice and profession of business architecture was given by Capgemini’s Ron Tolido and HP’s Walter Stahlecker. Alex Cameron from EDS Australia talked about t he EDS Approach to Enterprise Architecture. Stan Locke from Zachman Framework Associates addressed the topic of enterprise architecture and the new Zachman Framework, followed by Judith Jones from Architecting-the-Enterprise who gave an update on the emerging new TOGAF Framework for enterprise architecture. Issues related to developing a Framework consistent with enterprise culture and values were presented by Simon Shapiro, CIO of the Investec Bank from South Africa. The sessions closed for the day with an updated on The Open Group’s IT Architect Certification Program presented by The Open Group’s James deRaeve.

Tuesday and Wednesday sessions continued in parallel streams:

Enterprise Architecture; Business and Information Architecture; Service Oriented Architectures; TOGAF9 Update; S/MIME Secure Messaging Architecture (h ostedby The Open Group Messaging Forum); Enterprise Architecture and Governance; Key Issues in Enterprise Architecture Tools; Architecting Enterprise-wide Semantic Interoperability (Hosted by The Open Group Customer and Supplier Councils); Enterprise Architecture and Strategic Planning; Architecting Business Transformation; Enterprise Architecture Deployment and Value Realization; and Enterprise Architecture Case Studies.

Missed it?
photos
proceedings

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Overview of the IT Architecture Practitioners Conference in Capetown, South Africa, March 6-7, 2006
By Frank Heydenrych, Real IRM
More than 160 practitioners from around the world attended the conference in Cape Town, jointly hosted by The Open Group and Real IRM, The Open Group's local partner and South Africa's leading enterprise architecture specialist. Open Group President and CEO Allen Brown, presenters and delegates from more than a dozen countries including organizations such as Anglo Platinum, Sasol, SARS, Armscor, Woolworths and Sanlam presented on value obtained from and lessons learnt in enterprise architecture implementations.
The overall message from the dozens of presentations was that enterprise architecture as a discipline is delivering exceptional value to organizations, and both business and IT which embrace it will derive huge benefits today and into the future.

Time for academia, industry to partner on enterprise architecture?
Enterprise architecture is a vital discipline which needs collaboration between academia and industry if it is to deliver its full value in South Africa and elsewhere in the world.
This is the word from Mike Lambert, Fellow of The Open Group, lecturer at the University of Reading, and a speaker at the IT Architecture Practitioners Conference.

"There is growing recognition of how important it is to apply enterprise architecture as a core competency," says Lambert. "It is vital for organizations of all sizes to bring the discipline of enterprise architecture to bear on their business. Those organizations which have committed to enterprise architecture are enjoying benefits which make them more agile and competitive in the long term," says Lambert. There is growing awareness of the value of enterprise architecture, which is driving demand locally and worldwide, to the extent that demand exceeds supply. "Demand is surging for all types of architects, but the process for developing them is protracted, so there is a chronic shortage of top-class enterprise architects" notes Lambert. "As an industry we are developing all the right measures; now we need to deliver the architects. Under normal circumstances, it would take a few generations to develop new enterprise architects, but we don't have this luxury." Accordingly, Reading University has formed a partnership with commercial organizations to help fast-track the development of future enterprise architects; he has called for similar partnerships in South Africa.

Key factors that will enable this are:

  • Broadening of the base of university courses to include enterprise architecture.
  • Tight partnerships between academic institutions and industry.
  • These partnerships need to emulate established professions such as the medical and legal fraternities, which includes standards setting, internships to build experience, and structured career development.

The Open Group, the industry body which sets the standards for enterprise architecture, among others, has committed to working proactively with leading universities. It has developed TOGAF, The Open Group Architectural Framework, an industry-standard framework for delivering enterprise architecture. Enterprise architecture students at Reading University have found that enterprise architects with TOGAF qualification earn 60% more than those without. In line with this, it has asked enterprise architecture companies to help develop TOGAF-compliant training materials and courses to meet needs of universities

proceedings

 

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Look ahead – IT Architecture Practitioners C onference in Miami, FL
July 17-19, 2006
In parallel with Member meetings, July 17-21, 2006

This highly practical three-day conference and series of workshops will address the key issues and challenges that face enterprise IT architects today. The conference is aimed specifically at enterprise IT architecture practitioners and those directly involved in the management and oversight of enterprise architecture.

The conference will:

  • Examine the core competencies enabling the IT architect to define and implement effective solutions to the needs of the business, and clarify the skill and experience requirements
  • Address architect certification efforts within the industry
  • Provide tutorials on setting up and running an architecture practice; operating the architecture function as a business unit; assessing architecture competence; effective enterprise architecture development and governance strategies; and architecture and business transformation

What will you experience:

  • Participation in highly practical workshops teaching best practices in the enterprise architecture process
  • Review of in-depth case studies from organizations which put theory into practice, learning from them what works and what doesn't
  • Demonstrations and presentations on leading tools supporting open methods for enterprise architecture
  • Networking with leading architecture experts, vendors, and peers in the enterprise architecture field.

more information

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EVENTS

Events of The Open Group

S/MIME Secure Messaging Architecture Training
April 3-4, 2006 - Reading, UK
April 6-7, 2006 - Münster, Germany (in partnership with Noventum Consulting, course delivered in German)
http://www.opengroup.org/messaging/ssm-training.htm

Architecting to the Edge™
April 24-26, 2006
Washington DC, USA (in parallel with The Open Group Member Meetings, April 24-28, 2006)
http://www.opengroup.org/washington2006

S/MIME Secure Messaging Architecture Training
Washington, DC - April 26-27, 2006
http://www.opengroup.org/messaging/ssm-training.htm

IT Architecture Practitioners Conference Miami
July 17-19, 2006: Miami, FL, USA
(In parallel with The Open Group Member Meetings, July 17-21, 2006)
http://www.opengroup.org/miami2006

IT Architecture Practitioners Conference Lisbon
October 23-25, 2006: Lisbon, Portugal
(in parallel with The Open Group Member Meetings, October 23-27, 2006)

The Open Group’s 2007 Conference Schedule

Jan 29- Feb 2 USA West Coast
April 23-27 Europe
July 23-27 USA East Coast
October 22-26 Europe

Mark your calendar – or visit www.opengroup.org and download vcs files to load full event details into your calendar.

THE WEB


Top Downloads from the Web

Top 10 publication downloads in January 2006

  1. The Single UNIX Specification, Version 3
  2. TOGAF Version 8 'Enterprise Edition'
  3. Guide to Security Architecture in TOGAF ADM
  4. IT Architect Certification Program
  5. Business Executive’s Guide to IT Architecture
  6. Identity Management white paper
  7. Security Design Patterns
  8. X/Open Single Sign-On Service (XSSO) - Pluggable Authentication
  9. Distributed TP: The XA Specification
  10. TOGAF/MDA Mapping

Top 10 page views in January 2006

  1. The Open Group home page
  2. The Base Specifications, Issue 6
  3. The Single UNIX® Specification: Keyword search page
  4. Architecture home page
  5. Bookstore home page
  6. TOGAF 8
  7. Open Motif
  8. ITAC
  9. Open Motif downloads
  10. Test downloads

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OTHER

Final Thoughts...
If you would like to send a letter to the editor for possible publication in the future, if you have any suggestions on what you would like to see covered, or if you have any comments on any published story or article, please email us at memnews-feedback@opengroup.org .

   
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