|
|
Assembling on-demand services to automate business, commerce, and the sharing of knowledge ... It's been a couple of months since I posted to Loosely Coupled, precisely because I wanted to think about the impact of these three forces (SOA, Web 2.0 and on-demand) on how Loosely Coupled evolves.
|
||
|
Loose coupling - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
||
|
Coupling (computer science) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In computer science, coupling or dependency is the degree to which each program module relies on each one of the other modules. Coupling is usually contrasted with cohesion. Low coupling often cor...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coupling_(computer_science) |
||
|
Loosely coupled - if you’re a technology person, chances are pretty good that you are familiar with the term. If you’re a business manager, you’re probably at a loss when confronted with this term. Yet, this is a term that will reshape the business world in profound ways over the next several decades.
|
||
|
Glossary of web services and business process definitions and meanings ... Here are ten vital concepts for understanding what's what in web services. All definitions are drawn from Loosely Coupled's online glossary. For a full listing of definitions available in the glossary, see the A-Z index.
|
||
|
The friction-free linking enabled by web services (or any SOA). ... Loosely coupled services, even if they use incompatible system technologies, can be joined together on demand to create composite services, or disassembled just as easily into their functional components.
|
||
|
Hi, my name is Andy Zeigler, and I’m a Program Manager on the Internet Explorer Foundations team. ... Hi, my name is Andy Zeigler, and I’m a Program Manager on the Internet Explorer Foundations team. I’d like to tell you about a new IE8 feature called Loosely-Coupled IE, or LCIE for short.
|
||
|
"Concept Typedefs", the Holy Grail of BPM and Closing the Gap Between Business and IT ... SOA is about loosely coupled system integration. ... Sorry, I meant to say that SOA is about enabling loosely coupled business processes.
|
||
|
Tim Bray has a entry on good WebServices practices. Interestingly enough, most of his recommendations are all loosely coupled. That is he recommends, "pass messages", "use xml" and "asynchrony".
|