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Web Services, The new Buzz
Word
Web services are at the core of what is being termed the
next generation e-business.
This latest buzz word embraces a range of offerings likely
to be served up by systems integrators, ERP vendors and
ISPs this year. However there’s a need to be cautious of
hype and ambitious vendors who’re still figuring out how
to make their latest offerings work with the diverse systems
and needs of business.
Forrester Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts says web
services are clearly poised to drive productivity gains,
making it easier for companies to collaborate internally
and with business partners, through the interconnection
of software systems regardless of what platform they're
running on.
"Web services technologies can save millions in integration
costs today, but companies must proceed cautiously," says
Simon Yates, Forrester senior analyst and author of a new
report, The Web Services Payoff.
However, he warns about the lack of security standards
the need to be mindful of technology barriers, such as vendors
who can't yet articulate clear business values as they put
a web services veneer on existing products.
Web services architecture allows software applications
to be used by other software within an organisation or with
business partners. Major vendors supporting it include Microsoft,
IBM, Oracle, Sun and others.
Microsoft's .NET and Sun's Java 2 Platform Enterprise Edition
(J2EE) Web services models are already geared up for delivery
of Web services but the changeover requires new industrial
strength hardware as well with a separate server for database
and application server rather than trying to run them both
on the one box.
Web services will replace application servers, enterprise
application servers, customer relationship management servers,
and business process automation servers and will need system
resources well beyond existing minimal hardware requirements.
Your network will need to be robust and you’ll need to
increase your RTAM and network storage capacity. The rewards
will be there if the groundwork is put in and include greater
efficiency through making network programming significantly
easier as well as enable developers to quickly modify network
programs.
Forrester says web services will ease collaboration, but
executives must watch out for immature technology and vendor
hype.
Craig Roth, senior program director at META Group, a leading
research and consulting firm says increasingly large organisations
are embracing a platform-based approach that defines a common
stack of products and technologies that all enterprise applications
can leverage.
"The e-business stack continues to add layers as new technologies
emerge, such as application server, portal framework, Web
services and integration. And the e-business platform vendors
will continue to subsume functionality as common features
are recognized."
Although Web services technology lets companies interconnect
software systems more quickly and cheaply, streamlining
business collaboration, Web services "won't bring flexibility
to 30 years of proprietary systems overnight."
Forrester says executives should take a practical approach
and choose activities that promote visibility, like inventory
alerts, and lay the foundation for more complex collaboration
as technology barriers fall.
"In the past year, new specifications have emerged to standardize
basic Web services that open up broad growth and cost-cutting
opportunities," said Frank E. Gillett, senior analyst at
Forrester and author of a Forrester report, "Start Using
Web Services Now." "Companies should exploit these standards
now to build simple links between internal apps and their
business partners."
Web services are being widely touted by vendors as the
"new solution" for enterprise application integration. But,
says Forrester, until 2004 when the performance of Web services
improves and standards for security, auditing and transactions
stabilize, "traditional EAI technologies will prevail."
Forrester is looking toward 2006 as the year when standards
will have sufficiently matured enough to give execs the
confidence to apply Web services technologies to complex,
transactional business processes and to relationships with
"qualified but previously unknown parties."
For more information about Web services:
webservices.org
webservices.xml.com
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