--- In [email protected], "Colin Jack" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> Absolutely, I was more thinking that you'd identify the large business
> centric services then you'd work out what contracts they'd expose and
> how they'd communicate. Desing/implementation of those services would
> then contain domain model(s) which is where OO (and the related
> analysis/design) comes in.

We agree that OO is one of the ways to tackle service implementation. 
In fact, Gartner in its 2003 SOA paper had this to say:

"Service implementation software has an architecture of its own."

-Rob

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