Paul Krill
Editor at Large

BEA’s 360 vision still fuzzy

news
Sep 25, 20062 mins

Good idea, but questions unanswered

BEA jumped ahead of the pack last week, announcing the industry’s first native SOA platform, SOA 360. But the company left enough unanswered questions about the new platform to prompt one analyst to say there’s still much explaining to do.

SOA 360 spans three BEA product families: Tuxedo, WebLogic, and AquaLogic and provides  a “unifying methodology” for modeling, creating, developing, and deploying an SOA application using all of BEA’s SOA products, said Rob Levy, executive vice president and CTO of BEA.

SOA 360 features a collaborative tooling environment, called WorkSpace 360, and a common software architecture, dubbed mSA (microServices Architecture), that is based on SOA and the concept of a services network.

“I think the industry is looking for an approach to SOA that is different,”  CEO Alfred Chuang said, noting that BEA wants to approach SOA with a process, not just a product.

WorkSpace 360 allows users with different roles — such as business analyst, enterprise architect, and developer — to collaborate.

mSA is an event-driven architecture that uses notification services to publish and discover modular components or “microServices.” mSA will use industry protocols and standards such as OSGi (Open Services Gateway initiative), SOAP, WSDL, XML Schema, WS-Security, and SAML and will deliver backplane components, application frameworks, as well as activity, presentation, and infrastructure services. BEA wants all its products to use mSA by the end of 2008.

BEA revealed in March that it would make its WebLogic Server application server modular. The company now believes this approach can work for all its products, said Bill Roth, vice president of the BEA tools unit.

“Modularization will be a key design point for us, and ultimately [mSA] will have an effect across all of our products,” Roth said.

But Shawn Willett, principal analyst at Current Analysis, found BEA’s presentations “vague” about details such as what makes something mSA-enabled. 

“There’s just too many unanswered questions right now,” Willett said.

Paul Krill

Paul Krill is editor at large at InfoWorld. Paul has been covering computer technology as a news and feature reporter for more than 35 years, including 30 years at InfoWorld. He has specialized in coverage of software development tools and technologies since the 1990s, and he continues to lead InfoWorld’s news coverage of software development platforms including Java and .NET and programming languages including JavaScript, TypeScript, PHP, Python, Ruby, Rust, and Go. Long trusted as a reporter who prioritizes accuracy, integrity, and the best interests of readers, Paul is sought out by technology companies and industry organizations who want to reach InfoWorld’s audience of software developers and other information technology professionals. Paul has won a “Best Technology News Coverage” award from IDG.

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