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      Not me but an incredibly realistic simulation.
      John Evdemon
      is an Architect
      at Microsoft.

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    HL7 Advanced Web Services Profiles

    HL7 is an ANSI-accredited Standards Organization that develops interface requirements for health care organizations.   Last September the following profiles were submitted by Microsoft to HL7:

    If you work in Healthcare you are probably already aware of these profiles.  If you don't work in Healthcare you should still take a look - these profile serve as excellent guidelines for using some of the advanced Web Services specifications.

    Conngratulations to Roberto Ruggeri, Chris Kaler, Felipe Cabrera and Mauro Regio!

    Posted: Thursday, January 27, 2005 10:58 PM by jevdemon

    Comments

    HOLLOBLOG (ֺε) said:

    (via Loosely Coupled Thinking) HL7 is an ANSI-accredited Standards Organization that develops interface requirements for health care organizations.&nbsp;&nbsp; Last September the following profiles were submitted&nbsp;by Microsoft to HL7: Security Profile as DSTU: based on WS-Security&nbsp;(pdf), WS-SecureConversation, WS-Trust and WS-Policy Addressing...
    # January 30, 2005 8:44 AM

    Ed Dodds said:

    # January 30, 2005 7:47 AM

    Jeff said:

    ebXml is dead my friend
    # January 30, 2005 10:17 AM

    James Governor said:

    looks like i need to slow down a bit. john, would you care to discuss ebXML and Microsoft's approach to it? if i have misrepresented you it would make sense to clear up any misunderstandings on my part. i have heard both IBM and MS folks says ebXML is dead many times...

    I had also been meaning to ask about your compliance metadata strategy.
    # January 31, 2005 4:12 PM

    KP said:

    Any ties to between ERDA Famework and web services Profiles
    # February 10, 2005 8:49 AM

    John Evdemon said:

    KP,

    If you mean EDRA (Enterprise Development Reference Architecture), then the answer is no. EDRA was designed to standardize the internal architecture of a distributed application. HL7 is a well-known industry standard with several existing messaging patterns and messages. The profiles for HL7 could potentially be used within an EDRA-like framework. The HL7 profiles focus specifically on WS-Security, WS-Addressing and WS-ReliableMessaging. EDRA has a much broader scope, providing architectural guidance for enterprises looking to standardize the separation of business logic from the underlying infrastructure.
    # February 10, 2005 11:13 AM

    John Evdemon said:

    # February 10, 2005 11:14 AM

    John Evdemon said:

    James,

    While I used to work with ebXML in 1999/2000 (well before I joined Microsoft), most of the work I do these days is related to SOA and WS-I compliant web services (SOAP, WSDL, etc.). We're also developing recommendations for various vertical industries to assist them in the adoption of some of the advanced web services specifications (like WS-Security et. al.).

    Regarding Compliance metadata, Mike Burner gave a webcast a few weeks ago discussing some of the framework ideas we're working on (see http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/WebCastEventDetails.aspx?EventID=1032265153&EventCategory=5&culture=en-us&CountryCode=US). (Ignore the embarassing text crediting me with the webcast - this is Mike's baby.)

    Hope this helps!

    John
    # February 10, 2005 11:24 AM

    James Governor's MonkChips said:

    A long while ago I was excited to hear that someone from Microsoft was working on compliance architecture. This seemed like really good news, because RedMonk strongly believes in taking a systematic, integrated&amp;nbsp;approach to the related problems
    # February 17, 2006 7:16 AM
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