Middleware archives - Overheard in the tech blogosphere

Overheard in the tech blogosphere:

middleware

Aug 5 2009   12:22PM GMT

Overheard - Master data management (MDM)



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
master data management, MDM, Data analysis, middleware
“You can’t manage what you can’t measure, and many enterprises have few or no resources devoted to measuring or monitoring how users use the information that enables and drives the business.”

Michael Dortch, Building an MDM project plan for manufacturing

Today’s WhatIs.com Word of the Day is master data management (MDM).

Whether a company uses a data discovery and mapping tool or begins by surveying users to ask them ‘manually’ about their information access and use patterns and behaviors, knowledge about current data is the first step towards truly effective MDM.

It doesn’t have to be as elaborate as a true, interconnected real-time data map, but the closer an enterprise can get to that goal as a start, the firmer the foundation of that enterprise’s MDM strategy will be.

Jan 16 2009   4:00PM GMT

Overheard - JBoss is Red Hat’s golden goose



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
JBoss, Red Hat, middleware, Open source
Red Hat’s JBoss business is growing twice as fast as its Linux business, and it delivers $10 in consulting fees for every $1 in subscription revenue. This means that JBoss is much more interesting to Red Hat’s channel than Red Hat Enterprise Linux is. It also means that JBoss should be the foundation for Red Hat getting into the application business in earnest.

Matt Asay, Red Hat: JBoss growing twice as fast as Linux

JEMS is available from Red Hat through subscriptions that include certified software, support, updates and patches, documentation and multi-year maintenance policies.

Note: I’m starting to hear “cloud services” being called “middleware” again.  Cloud computing = middleware as a service (MaaS)?  I don’t think it’ll stick.  The acronym is pronounced Mass and will just remind the user that when his stuff is in the cloud and he’s given up all that control,  he’d better pray.