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Latest featured content about WS-CDL

Gregor Hohpe on Conversation Patterns

Topics
Choreography,
Orchestration,
Business Process Management,
SOA

In this interview, recorded at QCon London, Google architect Gregor Hohpe talks to Stefan Tilkov about his new work on conversation patterns. Building upon his earlier work on enterprise integration patterns, Gregor sees conversation patterns as playing a critical role in real-world interactions, with analogies in the natural world.

Conversations between loosely coupled services

Topics
Choreography,
Orchestration,
SOA

In this presentation, Google architect Gregor Hohpe introduces various concepts for to manage more complex interactions between services, including conversations, choreography, and orchestration. He provides a down-to-earth look at these concepts along with the associated Web services standards like WS-BPEL and WS-CDL, and identifies common patterns in service conversation.

News about WS-CDL

Orchestration vs. Choreography: Debate Over Definitions

Topics
Choreography,
Composition,
Business Process Management,
SOA

With SOA maturing, it becomes more apparent that many people are getting lost in the “alphabet soup” of the terms that are interpreted and misinterpreted differently by many people. This makes it even harder for people, discussing complex SOA issues, to understand each other.

The Industrialisation of IT?

Topics
Choreography,
Orchestration,
SOA

WS-CDL has struggled from birth to find mainstream acceptance. Now one of the main authors, Steve Ross-Talbot, has compared one of the principles behind WS-CDL, that of precision in defining services, to that of the micrometer during the early industrial revolution. Can WS-CDL have the same impact as the micrometer and really facilitate service reuse?

Presentation: Gregor Hohpe on Conversations Between Loosely Coupled Services

Topics
Choreography,
Orchestration,
SOA

In this presentation, Google architect Gregor Hohpe introduces various concepts for to manage more complex interactions between services, including conversations, choreography, and orchestration. He provides a down-to-earth look at these concepts along with the associated Web services standards like WS-BPEL and WS-CDL, and identifies common patterns in service conversation.