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    Cool New iPhone App – Summit Site

    December 9th, 2008

    Anthony Bradley just posted Talking Operational Intelligence with Kapow.  The post mentions a cool new iPhone app for Summit Agenda Planning.  Those of you with iPhones should definitely check it out, and others can see a version rendered through a regular browser on their computer.

    This is a great example of a mash-up.  I’m not sure about all the details, but I heard that it took less than three hours to create this.  It just goes to show that if you follow basic WOA principles, the ability to compose new capabilities is amazingly quick for a very broad potential audience!  Nick Gall happens to have just post a related set of thoughts in Generic Identifiers aka Web Scale Identifiers.


    Malcolm Gladwell Live – Mobilizing Social Power to Drive Change

    December 8th, 2008

    Have you missed Malcolm Gladwell on CNN, CBS, Times, NYtimes and all the other media appearances he’s made? This week you’ll have a chance to see him live, and get his latest book, even get it autographed!  Come see Malcolm’s keynote - Outliers: Why Some People Succeed and Some Don’t.


    Connecting, networking with your fellow attendees this week

    December 8th, 2008

    In addition to this blog, we’ve set up a Linked in group for all the AADI Summit attendees…don’t miss the opportunity to get real time updates, hook up with other attendees, and engage in your own discussions during the event.

     

    Join the group at www.linkedin.com/e/gis/1213077

     

    I will continue be blogging throughout the week, so expect plenty of great posts during the week on this blog as well.


    Analyst User Roundtables Line Up Announced!

    November 4th, 2008

    One of our attendees’ favorite way to network with their peers onsite is the Analyst User Roundtables. The idea is simple: one hour, one topic, one analyst moderating, and a dozen user attendees who share their experience, challenges and successes in a group discussion. We have 25 Roundtables this time, covering topics related (or complementary to) the analyst sessions on the agenda.

    This year we are also adding another new twist – community roundtables – where users get to choose the topic and a user attendee co-leads the session. If you have a topic you would like to see covered in a roundtable (that you don’t see in the Analyst User Roundtable line up) or you would like to lead a roundtable, please send your suggestions to me.

    Because of the limited size, these roundtables often “sell out” very quickly, so I highly recommend you register early (follow the link and sign into Agenda Builder to register for your selected AURs!).

    Here’s the list…organized in a few broad categories.

    Application Management & Governance

    How to Achieve Success with Application Lifecycle Management – Jim Duggan
    Best Practices in SOA Testing and Quality – Tom Murphy
    Outsourcing Applications Development: What Works – What Doesn’t? – Joseph Feiman
    Best Practices in Managing Customization of Packaged Applications – Andy Kyte
    Managing the Application Team’s Staffing and Skillsets: What Works? What Doesn’t? – Susan Landry
    Best Practices in Application Portfolio Management – Jim Duggan
    Application and SOA Governance: Dos and Don’ts – Matt Hotle

    SOA
    Best Practices in Justifying SOA Investments – Paolo Malinverno
    Best Practices in Service-Oriented Development – Michael Blechar
    Organizing for SOA: Roles and Responsibilities – Paolo Malinverno
    Leveraging BPM and SOA – Jim Sinur
    Managing the Data Side of SOA: Dos and Don’ts – Marc Beyer
    How to Implement a SOA Infrastructure: ESBs, Appliances, Flow Managers etc. – Massimo Pezzini
    Best Practices in Using SOA Governance Technologies – Frank Kenney
    Best Practices for B2B SOA – Benoit Lheureux
    Advanced Practices: Making the Most of Event Processing and Event Driven Architecture – Roy Schulte

    Modernization
    Legacy Modernization Through SOA: What Works? What Doesn’t? – Dale Vecchio
    Mainframe Migration: When and How to Do It? – Dale Vecchio
    When and How to Adopt Open Source Software – Mark Driver

    Web/Cloud
    Best Practices in Implementing SOA With Web Oriented Architecture – Dan Sholler
    Lessons Learned in Enterprise Mashups – Anthony Bradley
    Next Practices: Getting Application Infrastructure Services From the Cloud – Yefim Natis
    Next Practices: Developing and Running Applications In the Cloud – David Cearley
    Lessons Learned in Integrating Software-as-a-Service in Your Application Portfolio – Ben Pring


    Business Guru Malcolm Gladwell to Keynote Summit

    November 4th, 2008

    You’ve heard it so many times by now – SOA success isn’t primarily about technology, it’s about process, organization, culture and people. So issues like how you pick the right people, how you make the most of your teams, how you promote excellence and change are crucial. We are pleased to announce a keynote that will help and guide our audience with some of these questions. Renowned author Malcolm Gladwell, of “Tipping Point” and “Blink” fame, is out with a brand new book this November (“Outliers”) and has agreed to present the closing keynote of the Summit, drawing from his new and earlier work to show how to step outside of formal organizational hierarchies and leverage social and psychological dynamics to create powerful movements for change and success.

    Here’s the kicker: If you attend his keynote, you get his latest “Outliers” book for free, and you can even get it signed by the author!


    Agenda for the AADI Event

    November 4th, 2008

    We’ve posted all the session titles and descriptions of the December Gartner Application Architecture, Development & Integration Summit, taking place Dec 8-10 at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas (co-located back to back with the Enterprise Architecture Summit).

    For the 21st edition, we’ve revamped the agenda to provide even more relevant advice to our audience. There are two major themes this time: SOA and modernization. No big surprise there – SOA remains the elephant in the room for most architects and application teams today, and it is (or should be) part of a broader strategy to modernize legacy systems and bring on new generation application development practices that deliver value and competitive advantage.

    What’s really new is that we’ve structured the SOA content according to the different levels of maturity. As SOA goes mainstream, there is a growing diversity in the level of experience and sophistication that our past attendees wanted us to address. So we created three dedicated tracks that essentially deliver SOA 101, 201 and 301.

    The remaining two tracks cover modernization, either from the perspective of making the most of your legacy environments, or from the standpoint of building a 21st century application environment.

    A few other new themes and “virtual tracks” include B2B & Multienterprise, Governance, and Web2.0/SaaS/Cloud.

    More detail in later post as we highlight specific content, analysts, and give sneak previews of some of the presentations being developed. In the meantime, you can go to the event site and check out the PDF of the tracks and sessions or build your own agenda.