Executive Update

The Role of Information in a Service Oriented-Architecture

Posted February 14, 2007 | Technology |

A service-oriented architecture (SOA) strives to provide an information infrastructure that is highly responsive to rapidly changing business requirements, including new competition, mergers, acquisitions, business models, and regulatory requirements. SOA has shown great promise in reaching these goals and is rapidly gaining widespread interest and acceptance.

About The Author
Bill Mccrosky
Bill McCrosky is a solution architect in IBM Software Group Cross-Brand Services group. He has been with IBM for nine years and has worked in many technical capacities on customer data warehouse and business intelligence projects. Mr. McCrosky has 30 years of experience in the IT industry, with a concentration in database application development. He is certified as a project manager (PMP) and as an IBM consultant and is one of IBM's leading… Read More
Allen Luniewski
Allen Luniewski is a Senior IT Architect with IBM's Software Group. Dr. Luniewski began his career working at Xerox on the operating system for the pioneering Xerox Star line of workstations and products. In his 14-year stay in IBM's Research Division, Dr. Luniewski worked on projects including a WYSIWYG editor for SGML documents, an object-oriented database, and a system for helping users keep track of the objects on their workstation. He also… Read More
Don’t have a login? Make one! It’s free and gives you access to all Cutter research.