Tracking the life of a business requirement and Modeling for deployment

Published 18 December 05 09:08 AM | makif 

About: This blog post contains an invitation to to attend webcasts I will be conducting next week.

Hello everyone,

A number of you have asked for a more detailed analysis on J2EE and .NET interoperability using .NET remoting, I am in the process of finalizing that post and will publish it in the next week. Today, I wanted to extend an invitation to all my readers for two webcasts that I will be conducting next week, in addition, please feel free to invite your friends and coworkers to these sessions by forwarding the text and link given below. Details of the Web Casts are as follows:

Using Visual Studio for deployment modeling, Dec 20

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/WebCastEventDetails.aspx?EventID=1032287465&EventCategory=4&culture=en-US&CountryCode=US

The new modeling features in Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 can help you to validate application deployment scenarios by defining a logical data center. This webcast provides an overview of the new modeling features and a demonstration of the deployment modeling capability that is designed to improve and automate the interaction between development, infrastructure, and operations teams. The intended audience for this webcast includes solution architects, infrastructure architects, and developers.

 

Tracking the life of a business requirement, Dec 21

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/WebCastEventDetails.aspx?EventID=1032287471&EventCategory=4&culture=en-US&CountryCode=US

This webcast demonstrates the new integration capabilities between Microsoft Office Excel, Microsoft Office Project, and Microsoft Visual Studio. We track a business requirement from its definition in Excel to its completion in Visual Studio, so you can see how the new integration capabilities work on a practical level. The intended audience for this webcast includes architects, business analysts, and project managers.

 

Best regards,

Mohammad

 

Filed under:

Comment Notification

If you would like to receive an email when updates are made to this post, please register here

Subscribe to this post's comments using RSS

Comments

# James said on December 18, 2005 10:02 AM:
Hi Mohammad, You seem to be the right man to ask this question of. Does MS have a stance on the new Service Component Architecture proposal? Seems like an ideal role for .Net and a potential boon for heterogeneous shops to reduce the complexity of their J2EE backends. -James
# makif said on January 30, 2006 1:18 PM:
James I am not sure about Microsoft's offcial position so this is my personal opinion, Microsoft has focused on the service orientation vs. the 'component/container' model for quiet sometime now e.g. go through the idea of SDM and you will find that it addresses some of the same issue. I will do some more research to find if Microsoft has an official position on SCA.
# No Spin Architecture Tracking the life of a business requirement and | Paid Surveys said on May 29, 2009 5:42 PM:

PingBack from http://paidsurveyshub.info/story.php?title=no-spin-architecture-tracking-the-life-of-a-business-requirement-and

Leave a Comment

(required) 
(optional)
(required) 

  
Enter Code Here: Required

Search

This Blog

Syndication

Page view tracker