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Sprint Powers Up at CTIA Wireless 2007 with Showcase of Mobility ...
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Sprint (NYSE: S) is showcasing new and emerging mobility capabilities as part of its activities at CTIA Wireless, March 27-29 in Orlando, Fla. Sprint is located on the exhibit floor, booth number 2987. Visitors to the booth will have access to a breadth of products and services that give customers the power to enjoy great value and unmatched wireless capabilities on ...
For the last few months I've been collecting information about all things mobile. One of the things I learned was that Sierra Wireless is about to release this 1st quarter two AirCards that, for the first time in a long time, will support Macs. This means I will have access without having to locate wifi. Does anyone out there have some experience with being totally mobile...what it entails, drawbacks, stability?
Here's the link to the page.
Will Duckworth, the IBM wireless leader of Asia Pacific draws on his extensive experience in delivering wireless solutions, and highlights the key technology areas affecting quality wireless solutions.
The Router Pattern is perhaps the simplistic of all SOA Patterns, with the exception of the Proxy Pattern. The Router Pattern is also the pattern that is most likely to be implemented in a network lke an application delivery controller (ADC). That shouldn't be surprising, given that one of the purposes of an ADC like BIG-IP is to route messages to a specific node/server based on a wide variety of variables.
The Router pattern essentially involves routing requests to specific business services based on defined criteria. It's conditional routing, and it usually requires the extraction of some piece of data from the message upon which routing can be based.
Sauron preps his horde for MMORPG battle.
I've had a bit of a graphic spurt (as it were) and so here's another blog post based around a diagram.
I was talking to a journalist a couple of weeks back about the kinds of functionality that customers need to look for when looking for tooling for SOA initiatives, and which vendors provide which groups of functionality. It's not always easy to explain this kind of thing over the phone, so I thought I'd have a go at describing the main areas of functionality as a pyramid. Something like this:
Non-U.S. nations, such as Asia, have been "traditionally very conservative when it comes to the adoption of new technology," points out David Linthicum. Increased IT spends will drive SOA adoption in Asia. "Clearly, they see SOA as something that can add longer term value to their company, and that's something they are always looking for in IT."