SDA India is an online resource for Software, Development,IT, Architecture, Open Source, Mobile, Security, Databases, Delphi, C, OS, Asp, .Net, Php, Xml, Java
Conference for Java, Enterprise Architecture and SOA in India
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SDA India magazine and JAX magazine announced an Indian edition of their conferences at Bengalooru, India starting 28th May 2007.
There are three conferences
* JAX India 2007
* Enterprise Architecture Conference (EACon) India 2007
* Eclipse Forum India 2007
The last date for submitting papers is 6th Feb 2007 (for all the three conferences)
I like to predict the future and talk about futuristic technologies. I predict the following for 2008:
SDA India Magazine and sda-india.com present the first of its kind conference on Java, Eclipse, Enterprise Architectures, SOA, Web Services, Software Testing, and Project Management, to the Indian Enterprise IT community of CIOs, CTOs, Management, System Analysts, Development Managers, IT Managers, Project Managers, Project Leaders, Software Architects, Software Developers, Software Testers, Database Administrators, and Web Developers. Whether you are a decision maker evaluating the use of these technologies, an IT business looking for partners and networking opportunities, or a working professional looking to stay on the cutting-edge of technology, this is one conference you don’t want to miss.
Service-oriented architecture (SOA) solutions are capturing the interest of many IT vendors around the world, partly due to the high services-to-software dollar ratio. Asia Pacific (AP) is no exception, and a number of countries there lead the world in their deployment of SOA. Interviews with IT vendors in AP enterprises and data from Forrester's Business Data Services show that the short-term opportunities for SOA adoption lie in Japan, Australia, and New Zealand, while the longer-term potential will be greatest in China, India, and Japan.
Welcome to the blog where IBMers exchange viewpoints, share their perspectives to provide more insight around service oriented architecture solutions, and delve into a range of SOA-related subjects. We want you to speak out on SOA through comments in the blog -- from where your organization stands on SOA adoption, to your challenges and experiences -- to share with the larger community the impact of SOA on your marketplace. Sandy Carter is IBM's Vice President, SOA & WebSphere Marketing, Strategy and Channels. Hear Sandy discuss the basics of SOA, and address the key questions companies are asking by tuning into getting to the Heart of SOA. Understand how SOA works under the hood to improve operations. Discover the entry points to SOA and how companies worldwide are making SOA pay right away.
I was skimming through John Ribeiro's recent Infoworld article and began pondering over the points raised where he talks about how IBM's SOA centers in India and China are driving nimble services. The author argues how IBM is taking the promise of SOA reusability a step further: setting up SOA Solutions Centers at Pune, India, and Beijing. Their charter: to identify and create composite business services that can be reused by other customers in the same industry.
The article made for interesting reading, especially the trends in globalization of innovation and R&D can be seen in many large service organizations, including Infosys.
There is a distinct parallel to John’s article and the recent Business Week blog entry by Steve Hamm who makes a mention of Infosys’ research where he says “The company uses a tool it created, called InFlux, which captures a client's business requirements and transforms them into an IT plan. The company last May started holding day-long customer innovation workshops, one-on-one with a customer, where it listens to what the customer wants to do with its IT and business processes and then tries to come up with projects where the two sides can co-create solutions for the customer.”
China, Africa, S. America and East Europe will follow suit (If they haven't already started it, that is!)
India continues to soar. South Asia’s largest economy will continue to lead the pack as the next IT market opportunity. A major wave of IT investments has started to take place across banks, financial services institutions (FSI), telecom, manufacturing, government, resource, education, and other industries. This is probably why India is the fastest-growing country by IT spending in 2006 (22.4 per cent) and is forecast to remain so in 2007 (21.5 per cent) when it reaches Rs 75,891 crore