Podcasts: SOA is more than just an architecture model. It’s also a professional career choice, and that will only increase. “As people move from ‘I think we need it’ to ‘let’s execute and make it happen,’ they’re going to need a lot of talented people around who are knowledgeable about architecture development, governance, security and the other things to make SOA a reality,” David Linthicum explains. True, we saw that same thing in the early days of integration, component-based development and numerous other trends, but SOA is different. “The people who are going to drive SOA forward are going to have an eclectic array of talent. This is not something you can throw a developer, a network guy, a security guy at.” Tune into Real World SOA. Columnist’s corner: A new class of entrepreneur is emerging: the sort that understands technology first, business second, and can tap applications to help fledgling companies grow. In Tech 101 for startups Ephraim Schwartz discusses one such executive, Ryan Fernandez, who runs bathtub toy storage unit provider Boon which, through the use of technology, expanded from one to more than 10 products in just three years. Guess which chipmaker gave Fernandez his start. The news beat: Intel, it seems, has lost some internal e-mails it is required to produce in the antitrust lawsuit brought against it by AMD. BEA Systems today is detailing a triptych of AquaLogic tools it will make available as Eclipse plug-ins in the second half of this year. And a security expert cracks one of the U.K.’s new biometric passports by using a common RFID reader and customized code. Technology Industry