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Showing posts from August, 2018

Enterprise Strength Integration - as of 2011

Time for another historical integration presentation.  From 2011 to a major corporate client, visually less pleasing (and I had to reformat it off the customer’s corporate template), but the information value is high.  Every presentation is contextual, but I think this one's got some pretty strong hints.  Ongoing credit to @ Hillel Fuld  for inspiring me to contribute, and congrats on his new  https://www.hillelfuld.com . While I've seen the value of sharing and contributing in private live and community, Hillel demonstrates the strong value of sharing in the business world and being a mench.   While these presentations are dated, I think they offer value understanding where the tech world was, how it has built up to where it is, and some key ideas that can make a difference in projects today. Enterprise Strength Integration (as of 2011) from Akiva Marks

No SOA ROI - SOA is Dead? Getting real ROI from Integration - as of 2009

Continuing sharing of my historical enterprise architecture presentations, with a strong focus on enterprise systems integration.   Ongoing credit to @ Hillel Fuld  for inspiring me to contribute.   While dated I hope they offer value understanding where the tech world was and how it has built up to where it is.    This presentation is older, 2009, less flashy and more wordy.  But may actually take you deeper through enterprise integration concepts.  Please comment if there are any points you'd like to discuss. No SOA ROI - SOA is Dead? Getting SOA Value from Akiva Marks

SOA Methodology & Strategy - as of 2010

I've decided to share my library of presentations focused across my years in enterprise architecture in a US Fortune 50 corporation and my years as an enterprise architecture & integration consultant and IT management consultant in Israel. I hope you enjoy. While they may be dated they may be of value to understand where some of our technologies and software catalogs of today are at, and where there can be some improvement. Here's the first... SOA (Service Oriented Architecture) Methodology circa 2010. I credit Hillel Fuld's recent interview for the inspiration to share. SOA Methodology - Strategy (as of 2010) from Akiva Marks