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  • It's not SOA it's IT 2.0

    When you’re coming to implement SOA for the first time you probably focused on the application and technology aspects, but as you drill deeper and deeper into it you’ll found out that going through SOA is actually changing every aspect that your IT department is working. I personally think that we shouldn...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 04-07-2008, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, Enterprise Architect daily notes, Agile, General Software Development, Web Services
  • Are your IT vehicles based on one chassis?

    One of the most common tasks of IT departments is to move information between different roles in the enterprise and to enable them to view and manipulate the information as well as get insights out of them. Each one of those roles wants the data to be moved using a different vehicle, but dose this mean...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 06-08-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, Enterprise Architect daily notes, Agile, General Software Development, Web Services
  • What really makes you Enterprise Architect

    You just entered the meeting room for another meeting. Each one of the people around the table has certain specialization , which everyone recognize. The DBA has unique knowledge, the security specialist has unique knowledge, the software architect has unique knowledge and the network architect has unique...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 02-10-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, General Software Development
  • How to do inormation architecture (in 20 days)

    After understanding what is information architecture ( http://www.theeagroup.net/ea/Default.aspx?tabid=1&newsType=ArticleView&articleId=142 ) and what needed to be modelled ( http://www.theeagroup.net/ea/Default.aspx?tabid=1&newsType=ArticleView&articleId=143 ) let’s see how to do information...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 02-27-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, General Software Development
  • Modeling application dependencies

    One of the assets that you would expect to find in any enterprise is an inventory of all of the applications developed/bought by the enterprise as well as the cross dependencies between those applications. Although it sounds reasonable most of the enterprises that I saw have some inventory of their applications...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 03-06-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, General Software Development
  • IT('s) Simple!

    When I suggest the idea of mapping the enterprise IT assets, I usually got the answer that it's a waste of time because “IT is simple“ This diagram represents an average customer that I'm dealing with. This is an example of an American company with 300 applications, 150 products (COTS), 100 databases...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 03-19-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, General Software Development
  • How to build practical enterprise architecture team

    Enterprise architecture team might be the successful CIO right hand (especially in today economic situation) or a group of people that you can’t really understand what they are doing. A successful enterprise architecture group will help you to reduce IT costs, optimize IT operation, make better IT planning...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 03-26-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, General Software Development
  • I can know if your complex IT project will succeed!

    Draw two identical lines (same length). One (the upper) represents the time invested in applications life cycle and the second (bottom) line the human resources available for your IT organization. On the first line draw a point which represent how much time your organization invest in systems development...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 04-02-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, General Software Development
  • blueprint - an enterprise architecture outcome

    There are many outcomes to enterprise architecture work, but one of the important and most communicative one is a blueprint of your enterprise to-be architecture. People like to use city planning as an allegory to enterprise architecture. And similar to the role of city blueprints, which serves as a...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 04-10-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, General Software Development
  • Principles as enterprise architecture outcome

    Principles are the better half of blueprints . Principles enable enterprise architects to set up the boundaries that application / solution architects should follow to create their own architecture / solution, in order to build better enterprise architecture. Principles are actually set of rules which...
    Posted to Natty Gur (Weblog) by nattYGUR on 04-17-2009, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Enterprise Architecture, General Software Development
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