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The Latest

The Real Reason SOA is Making a Comeback

The 2009 “SOA is Dead” meme may have turned out to be a tempest in a teapot, but there’s no question that interest in Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) waned in the

Beware Cloud Brokerages

Yesterday, in a moment of weakness, I managed to sit through most of a Gartner Webinar on Cloud brokerages (I know, what was I thinking?) We’re researching cloud brokerages for

The CAP Theorem in the Cloud

You may have heard of the CAP theorem: no distributed computing system can offer partition tolerance, basic availability, and immediate consistency all at once. You can have any two of

Rally Software Purchases Agile Advantage

Rally Software has announced that it will purchase Agile Advantage for an undisclosed sum. Both firms offer agile software development tools, and the two had worked together on several projects.

The Real Trick to Hadoop

If you were to list the top half dozen overhyped, buzzy topics in IT these days, I’m sure Hadoop would make the list. Hadoop is an open source framework for

Waratek Helps You Move Java Into the Cloud

“Java is a 15 year old language,” says Waratek Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer John Matthew Holt. At the time it was developed, he points out, the computing landscape was

The Scrum But Paradox

Remember Calvinball? From the Calvin & Hobbes comic strip, the most important rule of Calvinball is that anybody can make up new rules for Calvinball. As a result, it’s never

Whatever Happened to REST?

In the years following Roy Fielding’s seminal doctoral dissertation, it appeared that Representational State Transfer (REST) was the Next Big Thing in the world of enterprise IT. REST was the

Is Your Agile Agile?

In my last blog post, I introduced the topic of this blog: The Agile Architecture Revolution. As in, architecture that is agile, not the architecture of Agile. But since this

Is XML too big? Does anyone care?

The Extensible Markup Language, or XML, is big. But is it too big? And if so, should we do anything about it?  The World Wide Web Consortium says that XML

With Android, Google is turning into Apple

The biggest difference between iOS and Android has always been simple: Apple makes its own phones, operating system and cloud back-end, and sells essentially a single model of phone and

Google Unveils Android 4.1 Jelly Bean

During the keynote address at the Google I/O 2012 event, Google revealed some key new features in the next update for Android. A.k.a. Jelly Bean, Android 4.1 has improved speech-to-text

Google Launches an IaaS Offering

Google has unveiled a new infrastructure as a service (IaaS) offering called Compute Engine that will compete with similar cloud computing services from Amazon and Microsoft. At the Google I/O

BlackBerry 10 Delayed Again

As part of its quarterly earnings report, RIM announced that it will delay the launch of BlackBerry 10 yet again. The next update to RIM’s mobile operating system was promised

Have some butter with your Android jelly beans

Google I/O, San Francisco — Google has moved the bar forward with its late-June announcement of the 10th version of Android, formally known as Android 4.1 “Jelly Bean.” Scheduled to

Red Hat Announces Pricing Plan for OpenShift

At its Red Hat Summit and JBoss World 2012 events, Red Hat announced how it plans to make money from its OpenShift platform as a service (PaaS). Beginning later this