John Shewchuk and Dennis Pilarinos: BizTalk Services Explained
- Posted: Jun 19, 2007 at 12:27 PM
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- 12 Comments
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In this video, James Conard talks with
John Shewchuk and
Dennis Pilarinos about BizTalk Services.
In the simplest definition, BizTalk Services simplifies application connectivity by extending WCF and providing a set of hosted services. John and Dennis quickly explain BizTalk Services by discussing the challenges with building applications today. Dennis also shows four demos of BizTalk Services and then drops into Visual Studio along the way to show the programming model.
You can download the BizTalk Services SDK from http://www.biztalk.net
In the simplest definition, BizTalk Services simplifies application connectivity by extending WCF and providing a set of hosted services. John and Dennis quickly explain BizTalk Services by discussing the challenges with building applications today. Dennis also shows four demos of BizTalk Services and then drops into Visual Studio along the way to show the programming model.
You can download the BizTalk Services SDK from http://www.biztalk.net
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That is an impressive demo!!! The potential of this is very far reaching specially in the SOA space.
Anyway I have some questions if that’s ok, and they are …
So what is the performance like?
How far can I scale this?
Can I get this to work with (W)WF?
Can I do async or long running communications with this technology?
Have you tried connecting this to Java and other non-Microsoft technologies?
Isn’t calling this technology ‘Biztalk Connectivity Services’ going to get it confused with the full Biztalk product? Specially if there is no migration strategy from one to the other?
I’m pretty excited about this … and I have a 100 more questions but that’s enough to be getting on with for now.
Here are afew I've thought of ...
BizBus
CFBus
.NetFX Discussion Services
Parley
CakeCom ... because it's as simple as
Gosh, I really hope this is in Orcas! My reasoning is because if it's there Devs will use it. If it's not many Dev's won't know of it's existence and try and write there own. If it's intention is to be free then why not bundle it in, hey it could even be another selling point (like Orcas needed any more!)
As John and Dennis indicated, the project is nascent at this point. Given that it is still in CTP form, it can't be rolled into the Orcas release (Orcas in Beta1, moving to Beta2).
Have you played with the Services yet? If not, I encourage you to check them out. If you have suggestions about the product, you can either provide feedback here or on the http://labs.biztalk.net site.
I am composing a reply to your other post as well - have to check a fact first...
Regards,
Justin Smith
http://blogs.msdn.com/justinjsmith
This video has me pretty excited about where this project might go, but I have one question about future plans (which I realize you may not want to talk about now, but I have to ask anyway...)
How do you plan to deal with occasionally-connected clients to the ISB? How will they get access to events published when they were disconnected?
Hi,
I have to say that I am also pretty excited about this project.
In relation to occasionaly connected clients, because ISB crosses over the internet it is a good point to raise the question of occasionaly connected clients and services.
WS-Discovery could apply quite nicely. Standardized Bye/Hello and Probe/Resolve messages could offer a WS* compliant solution to provide presence awareness and discovery and as well a s ensuring interoperability.
Are there plans to integrate WS-Disco in a later release?
Rgds,
A.
Are you going to provide the Identity Service as installable service within ISB package, which can be hosted inside of an enterprise?
https://jxta-guide.dev.java.net/
https://jxta-guide.dev.java.net/source/browse/*checkout*/jxta-guide/trunk/src/guide_v2.5/JXSE_ProgGuide_v2.5.pdf
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