I recently returned from the Gartner AADI conference in Las Vegas, and had the chance to enjoy dozens of good conversations with IT execs who were there primarily to explore strategies for the coming year. Some thoughts from the conference and sessions I was able to catch:
- Budget optimism... Overall it seemed that there was a guarded optimism for re-invigorated architecture and integration projects and budgets in 2010, many people said they were part of a new group or new reporting structure specifically tasked with defining a strategy.
- SOA Won't Die - in fact any lead architect or CIO I caught up with says they are quietly going about service-orientation and getting real value from it, even if it's not sexy anymore. After the age of boundless service proliferation earlier in the decade, it seems that much of the talk is now about authority - who owns and manages these services, and how are they compensated for doing so. Recently a lot of the "SOA elite" posted some good discussion on this topic (check out this eBizQ SOA forum here).
- Heterogeneity is king. The optimism for integration is tempered by a big dose of skepticism about "one stop shop" vendor claims - even more so than you normally hear from the analysts. Companies are dealing with the realities of multiple acquired systems from different vendors, and looking for ways to modernize their applications.
- People understand the distinction of service virtualization. Another pleasant surprise was the understanding shown for hardware/network virtualization vs. the practice of Service or behavioral virtualization of constrained assets that simply can't be captured or dropped on a VM. I believe the analyst community has talked to application layer customers about how these assets can be brought to bear earlier into the lifecycle, even if this practice doesn't exactly fit under defined research fields like software quality, app dev, virtualization and IT ops.
- Cloud Computing still uncommon in large-scale enterprises - There was a great deal of content about Cloud-based approaches at the summit, and it is certainly important to get some forward insight. In practical terms however I did not see these $500M+ company IT execs mention Cloud in their basket of must-do items for 2010, other than a notable exception of specifically wanting trading partners to use the Cloud more to ease cost and access issues. (This reminds me of public transportation, "it would be great if everyone else would do it to free up the road...") Certainly a lot of curiosity and predictions around this. I am sure at a less enterprise software heavy conference you would see more cloud practitioners and this will continue to grow.

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