How do user interface front-ends fit into a landscape that is increasingly service-oriented? A brief discussion yesterday with Peter Svensson sparked off a flurry of activity, and this diagram is the result. Thanks, Peter. Thanks also to Justin Meyer for his feedback and suggestions.
I won't waste words here, except to say that this diagram and its accompanying text should be sufficient to show how a SOFEA-based client application fits into a Service-Oriented ecosystem and works seamlessly with services (both SOAP and REST) and with processes (both the orchestrated and the choreographed variety).
[For those who are wondering what SOFEA is, read this gentle introduction. The original detailed paper is here and my original blog posting on it is here. There is also the original ServerSide article, but be warned that it points to an earlier version of the paper. Then there's the InfoQ article co-authored with Peter Svensson, which is not just about SOFEA but a family of similar architectures that rationalise the Presentation Tier. And finally, a Google Groups community that any interested party can join.]
I won't waste words here, except to say that this diagram and its accompanying text should be sufficient to show how a SOFEA-based client application fits into a Service-Oriented ecosystem and works seamlessly with services (both SOAP and REST) and with processes (both the orchestrated and the choreographed variety).
[For those who are wondering what SOFEA is, read this gentle introduction. The original detailed paper is here and my original blog posting on it is here. There is also the original ServerSide article, but be warned that it points to an earlier version of the paper. Then there's the InfoQ article co-authored with Peter Svensson, which is not just about SOFEA but a family of similar architectures that rationalise the Presentation Tier. And finally, a Google Groups community that any interested party can join.]
1 comment:
Thank you sir , Keep posting!
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