Joshua Jackson wrote:
On 12/8/07, Raymond Feng <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi, Joshua.

Thank you for your interests in Tuscany. Let me try to dump some information
to you :-).

Tuscany provides open-source software for distribution at no charge to the
public, that simplifies the development, deployment and management of
distributed applications built as compositions of service components, where
the components may be written using any of a wide range of programming
languages and where the components can be connected using any of a wide
range of communication technologies. This software will implement relevant
open standards including, but not limited to, the SCA and SDO standards
defined by the OASIS OpenCSA member section.

There are a few articles/slides:

http://webservices.sys-con.com/read/325183.htm
http://java.sys-con.com/read/458183.htm
http://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/download/attachments/70211/Tuscany-SOAWorld.ppt?version=1
http://apache-tuscany.blogspot.com/

Thanks for the article. I kind of get idea now. This is what I get from it:
SCA is a kind of glue code for glueing pool of apps to be used by
another apps. So our new apps will connect to SCA and SCA will connect
to these pool of apps. CMIIW.

You can find more information at: http://incubator.apache.org/tuscany/.

Tuscany is not an ESB offering. My understanding is that it's closer to the
business application developers by providing a service assembly model and
programming model. The ESB will provide the flexible IT infrastructure that
composite applications can be deployed.

I don't quite understand. People out there compares SCA with JBI,
which is an ESB. :( And that's an insight that I get from those
articles you gave me too.


This may help:
http://www.osoa.org/display/Main/Relationship+of+SCA+and+JBI

--
Jean-Sebastien

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