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I mentioned that I was looking for new opportunitie s but I have decided to concentrate my independent Microsoft .NET consulting on all things Connected Systems and Messaging. I see many shops around the country struggling with WCF and WF. In this area, I have been a part of the WCF and WF SDRs for 4 years now since the beginning and part of the large 2-year WCF and WF effort at Algorithmics. I am available, on a consulting basis , to help you with your WCF, WF and BizTalk needs. In addition, I believe that WCF is too low-level and difficult for many shops that are pursuing Services and SOA beyond a few causal services. To that end, I am an authorized representative for Neuron ESB and it's place in accelerating your WCF and SOA efforts. Using my 26 years in the industry, I can help you look at your Architecture and find ways to make it better. Not only that, but I can help ensure you are on the right path for Oslo. If you are interested, please respond here or email to managedcode44 AT hotmail. Please do not use that email for unrelated questions - that's what the comments and newsgroups are for. Technorati Tags: Sam Gentile , WCF , WF , BizTalk , Software Architecture , Neuron ESB , ESB , SOA Read More...
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So three people in a row have asked for WCF Tips and Gotchas. We as the WCF/Connected Systems and Neuron teams have posted these on Dave Pallman's blog , our Neuron Architect. Collectively we have over 20 years of WCF experience including Indigo team members David and Marty Waznicki. So, to repeat and condense September 25 WCF Tips #1 - Service Interface Design David Pallmann’s WCF Tips #1 - Service Interface Design Service Interface Design Design Service Contracts that are Themed and Indivisible Tip: Ensure service contracts have a theme (purpose). Avoid combining unrelated service operations in the same contract; only include operations that contribute to the theme. This is also a SOA best practice. Rationale: A service interface is supposed to be indivisible—that’s why we use the word contract . If a service contract has a purpose or theme and all of the operations in the contract contribute to that theme, the contract design is likely to be strong and survive. In contrast, throwing many unrelated operations into the same service contract under a weak premise, such as “all the public services my company exposes to partners”, is not likely to stand the test of time. What if I Don’t? The longevity of your service contracts may be compromised. Examples: · A bad example is a service whose theme is “Data Access”: this is far too vague a purpose for a service and invites Read More...
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My colleague, Brian already wrote about the Neuron team growth and openings, but I wanted to add my bits, as both a Neuron user/consumer and influencer/developer. As the SOA Practice Lead in Neudesic, I have been exposed to many areas of the Microsoft technology stack and their use in SOA and other Connected Systems in companies ranging from SMB's to large Fortune 100 accounts. One of the things I see, more and more is it takes a lot of effort to take the raw .NET Framework 3.0/3.5 and make them function in an SOA. I have seen a large upswing in using Neuron to enable WCF and WF. In other words, companies are very interested in not having to take 6 months and write pieces of a Service Oriented Infrastructure (SOI) with the raw WCF bits. I am using Neuron myself in several projects and I continue to be blown away by the continued innovation that comes from the team! 2007 was a banner year for Neuron and now we are staffing aggressively in order to help us develop a world class ESB product. As Brian pointed out , Neuron is a pure Microsoft ESB, built from the ground up on WCF. We are looking for some highly talented engineers to come on board and make it even better! And yes, you would be working for the one and only Marty Wasznicky, who, as I posted here , joined Neudesic as VP Product Development for Neuron. The positions are in Irvine CA only. If you are interested, please drop me a note, or through this blog. Senior Software Design Engineer (SDE) Are you a senior SDE looking Read More...
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Weeks ago, I stated that we had some real "big name rock star" names coming into Neudesic. I am extremely delighted and proud to announce the first of these. The one and only Marty Wasznicky has joined Neudesic from Microsoft!!! Marty worked for 6 years for the BizTalk/CSD team and is of course, the man behind the recently released ESB Guidance . He also created the BizTalk Virtual Technologist (VTS) program, of which we have 5 members at Neudesic. Marty is going to be leading our Neuron ESB Product Development, where he will join David Pallmann, also from Microsoft CSD (Indigo) group. We have been one of the "go to" partners for Microsoft on BizTalk and all things SOA/CSD and Marty will still be working with BizTalk, with a focus on incorporating all the great Oslo technologies as they emerge. I truly believe that we have something very exciting in our Neuron ESB product that really accelerates .NET 3.0 development from 6-12 months down to days. As an accelerator for WCF, we are truly working with Microsoft to increase adoption of .NET 3 and to make the ramp up curve much less. I know, that I will be making it a major focus of my SOA practice. To say I am excited would be an understatement! Look for another big name announcement very soon :) [tags: Marty Wasznicky , .NET 3.0, Neudesic, Neuron, ESB, SOA, SAS, Service Oriented Architecture, Enterprise Architecture, Software Architecture, Indigo, WCF, Windows Communication Foundation, Microsoft, CSD] Read More...
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First things first; A very happy thanksgiving to everyone in the US! I am going to be out doing an INETA presentation in Findlay, Ohio. Like the other talks this year, this one will focus, as stated here , spends a whole hour on Architectural, Domain-Driven and Software Patterns that I believe are neccessary to design and develop a quality WCF Service. The second hour of the talk is on WCF. My personal belief, that even with boundaries are explicit and the focus being on messaging betweern autoonomous services, it is vitally important, even more than ever, that the Service is designed and implemented with best practices including all the ones we know for other kinds of applications (such as DDD, O/RM, TDD, etc). I will be focusing on the Neuparts solution. My hope is to get pieces into VS2008 but that is unlikely to happen given my work schedule. Hope to see you there! User Group: Findlay, Ohio Area .NET User Group Date: November 27, 2007 Speaker: Sam Gentile Topic: SOA (Web Services) The directions I have been given are as follows: We are located at the Marathon Petroleum Company office in Findlay Ohio, 539 South Main Street. Coming from the north the office complex is on the right hand side at the intersection of Harding Street. Turn left and you will see the Main lobby on your left - it is in the middle building. You can park anywhere in the lots across from that entrance. I have included a link to the location http://local.live.com/?v=2&sp=Point.qv5g6080w6tt_539%20S%20Main%20St%2C%20Findlay%2C%20OH%2045840-3229%2C%20United%20States___&encType=1 Read More...
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