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daily link  Friday, June 28, 2002

BPMI.org releases BPML 1.0. "BPML 1.0 supports the modeling of end-to-end processes including private implementations and public interfaces for transactional and collaborative business process."
permalink Posted to services, xml @ 11:12:15 PM ( comments)

Patric Logan: Loose Coupling. "Loose coupling is not goodness in and of itself. There is a goal. In an enterprise information system the goal is to provide the information the enterprise wants, when it wants it. That has a cost. Loose coupling can support the cost of change when the enterprise does not have what it wants." [Loosely Coupled]
permalink Posted to services @ 11:10:35 PM ( comments)

John Udell: Connecting with Web services. "Web services tackle business processes that are widely distributed both in time and space. The new design pattern that arises in response to this challenge is called loose coupling." [Patrick Logan]
permalink Posted to services @ 11:07:55 PM ( comments)

Ever-unfolding story of RealNames.

Keith Teare, CEO: "Every brand on the planet is being switched off and replaced with MSN Search results in the name of a better user experience. The monopoly that is the browser is now exclusively tied to MSN content for every natural language input to the browser address bar. And that was more than 500 million inputs between January and March 2002 and growing by 15% a month."

Anonymous: How to spend $130 million and blithely deny any responsibility for your actions. "Let there be no mistake about it, RealNames' failure to persuade Microsoft to sign a new agreement for the distribution of its Keyword service was the immediate cause of the company's shutdown.  But you cannot understand the motivations behind Microsoft's decision unless you also understand the history of the parties' relationship, the operative terms of the agreement, and how RealNames, under Mr. Teare's direction, flouted the terms of that agreement and then was surprised to find out that its lifeline was severed.  Mr. Teare has his version of this history, and then there is the real story."
permalink Posted to finance @ 10:55:19 PM ( comments)

Fast Company: What's the Matter With Microsoft? "A more conservative gauge of Passport's acceptance comes from Gartner's Litan. She counts 14 million active Passport accounts these days, up from 7 million last fall. By "brute force," she says, Microsoft has been able to double its Passport user base in less than a year. Yet it hasn't been able to convince consumers that they really are better off for it. In her latest survey, Litan found that just 8% of Passport users said that they signed up for the service primarily because it let them avoid reentering credit-card data. All of 2% said that they signed up for Passport primarily because it eliminates the need to have multiple IDs and passwords. "Is this really the killer app?" she asks wryly. If Microsoft hasn't yet won our loyalty, do people want someone else to manage their online identities? When Litan asks consumers that question, she finds that banks get the highest endorsement, with support from 47% of the public. In contrast, Microsoft gets a mere 12% of the vote. Yet that's still ahead of the ratings for AOL, Yahoo, and telephone-service providers, all of which are at 6% or less."
permalink Posted to identity @ 10:47:49 PM ( comments)

tweney.com: Broken trust. "The problem is that Palladium requires users to place a huge amount of trust in Microsoft. You don't get to decide what runs on your computer -- Microsoft does. You can't even open files unless you've been authorized by Microsoft, or by a third party. And that puts a huge amount of power into the hands of these corporations." [scripting.com]
permalink Posted to identity, services @ 10:44:34 PM ( comments)

Microsoft's Federated Security and Identity Roadmap. "By the turn of the century, the question arose of how to get all the computers connected to the Internet to talk to one another. The industry looked to what made the Web successful. This new model, known as XML Web services, focuses on getting heterogeneous systems within and between businesses to talk to one another, regardless of the underlying operating system, language, or programming model. It accepted that these systems were written in different languages, with different programming models. But it was based on the notion that some simple technology standards would be able to bridge that gap."
permalink Posted to identity, services @ 10:42:15 PM ( comments)


Copyright (C) 2002 Paul Kulchenko Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog. Updated 8/22/2002; 5:23:58 PM