Completely buried with two projects and the main one is going to CTP #2 at a major back in Paris/London next week so going to scrape this together quickly. I have also been pairing with Steve back on the main project on solving performance problems - yesterday, he and I optimized a section of the system where an operation was taking 25 to 30 minutes and got it down to 30 seconds! Now that's a good boost! I have much in my head concerning where we are at and my current feelings on being agile, architecture and such but they will have to wait. I tried to blog about the Apple iPhone announcement but couldn't muster up enough interest...
Architecture and SOA, Agile
- SOA and BI Impendence Mismatch
- Arnon has great comments on a presentation (via Shahid Sah's blog) by Ron Jacobs on the Software Architect's Role. he says, "In this presentation, entitled Architects and the Architecture of Software, Ron compares the architect's role to that of an explorer, advocate, and designer," and "However, I would personally replace "advocate" with "mentor", and "explorer" with a "polymath" or "Renaissance" man. I'd also add a leader and visionary (although Ron mentions that as part of the discussion on explorer)." I agree with his additions, at least how I see my role.
- He also has some outstanding comments on Agile Iterations and what I really want to write about (and finding) when I have time: "To me, that is just a reminder why JEDUF is important. I find that in projects that are large or overly complex "sacrificing" one, two, or even three iterations for handling technical risks and forming a candidate architecture goes a long way (and I don't care if this makes my project not agile. I am fine if it is pliant, lagum or what-not)." I am actually finding its quite a bit more than 1-3 Iterations depending on the project and environment. Actually this ties in with Jim's Design Maps.
- Cazz on Building Software Factories Today
- Richard Venyard on SOA Algebra
WCF/Indigo
Agile
Orcas
CLR/Win32
Avalon
Technorati Tags: .NET, Windows Communication Foundation, Windows Presentation Foundation, WCF, WPF, Agile, Agile Development, Software Architecture, Microsoft
Posted
Wed, Jan 10 2007 12:46 PM
by
Sam Gentile
Filed under: Agile and Extreme Programming, Windows Vista, Software Architecture, WCF/Indigo, New and Notable, CLR, SOA, Avalon/WPF, TFS and MSF-Agile, VS Team System, Orcas