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December 2005 - Posts

Some holiday reading...

I was going to put a list of links together for some folks on my team to read and thought they may be a fun read for others Eric Evans talks about MDD and Domain-Driven design Martin Fowler talks about language workbenches Martin Fowler talks about in-memory
Posted by timmall | 0 Comments

The breaking point of language usability

Along the lines of simplicity and approachability there is an interesting thread on " Lambda the ultimate " rgarding the introduction of generics to the Java language. Following is the original posting: The indefatigable Bruce Eckel is learning all about
Posted by timmall | 0 Comments

Architecture Tradeoff Analysis

At the end of the day, no matter how bright you are, your effectiveness and impact is augmented by the bag of tools that you carry around. The bag of tools in our industry typically comes from experience and pattern/model matching from this experience
Posted by timmall | 1 Comments

On Models

This post is inspired by a number of posts that I have read in the last couple months and my experience in my current team when we talk about models and the enabling infrastructure. Some of the interesting posts that have made me want to post on this
Posted by timmall | 4 Comments

Barry's Blog...

Barry Briggs gave a really cool demo to my team yesterday. I think it really helped folks think more about models in the world of business processes that are meaningful to a typical business analyst. After the meeting he made mention of his blog which
Posted by timmall | 3 Comments

Model Transformation Links

Some interesting links regarding model transformation… Classification of Model Transformation Approaches Merging Models Based on Given Correspondences Generic Model Management Transformation: The Missing Link of MDA IBM’s Model Transformation Framework
Posted by timmall | 0 Comments

Object-Oriented, Message-Oriented… but what do we model

So, I liked Don’s “Agility and the Big Dog” post . I wanted to selfishly hijack the content to talk about something else though. The question to me is that as we start thinking about messages and services is it really all about the message? What do customers
Posted by timmall | 0 Comments
 
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