Thursday, April 05, 2007

TPF as a SOA platform

Really... I am not kidding. For those of you who read my posts at all regularly you know that the majority of my time is spent in Open Systems. But in reality there is still a lot of data and processing that occurs on the mainframe. I caught the following press post on Information Week and simply had to read it.

IBM Opens Up System Z Mainframe To SOAs

Now, reading into the press release it's much more fluffy than the title sounds. But really, would we expect IBM marketing to not be able to do their jobs? (I think they were the original inventors of F.U.D., right?)

Still, it does make you think about what kind of data source a mainframe could be for any high volume system. The ability to handle large amounts of data and transactions in a stable manner is a consistent throttle that we encounter in the Open Systems world. Now the cost/benefit needs to also be compelling since there are many other ways to solve the problem then simply making the iron bigger.

I had an opportunity to talk to some IBMers lately and they are still big on big boxes, just now they want to slice those boxes into 100s of virtual servers and provision them dynamically. I found it ironic that when you consider the open source revolution pushing hard away from big iron, we are now pushing closer to it. The IBM Z series and the IBM P series even sit in the same "refrigerator boxes" now. (For those who are not Z or P savvy Z=Mainframe, P = Open Systems) So you could walk out on a raised floor and not even know if it's an open system or a mainframe system... now it's just a system.

But then, isn't that how a service consuming customer views it?


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