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Microsoft Vision & RoadmapDan AllingSenior Product ManagerConnected Systems Division
Agenda
• Update on Microsoft’s ‘Real-World’ Philosophy to Service Oriented Architecture
• Delivering on SOA today with the release of BizTalk 2006 R2
• Expanding the boundaries and impact of SOA tomorrow and in the future
A style of architecture, not a productLeverages existing assets in a loosely-coupled manner Standards are critical for success : WS-*, XML, RSS…Web services makes service orientation practical and drives broad industry interoperability
Primary benefit centers around business agility
SOA represents an enabler for faster process change, greater business insight and competitive advantage, and the creation of a new generation
of dynamic applications.
What is SOA?
Real World SOA
Data Legacy LOB PackagedApps
TradingPartners
Data Legacy LOB PackagedApps
TradingPartners
ExposeService enablement
ExposeService enablement
Data Legacy LOB PackagedApps
TradingPartners
Compose Orchestration and Workflow
Data Legacy LOB PackagedApps
TradingPartners
Consume Productivity/Innovation
PackagedApps
Devicesand People
Web 2.0
Portal
Data Legacy LOB PackagedApps
TradingPartners
Tooling
Management
Data Legacy LOB PackagedApps
TradingPartners
PackagedApps
Devicesand People
Web 2.0
Portal
Security
Putting the Pieces Together
Reduced Paper Records by 70%Improved patient care
Real time customer integrationEnabling business experimentation
CommSee: 30k users, 100+ appsPrimary branch experience
World-wide IT support for 400k+ usersIncreases productivity, reduces deployment time by 83 percent
IDD: 45% decrease in training time; 9x ROI;Drive up average margin per sale; reduce call duration by 10%
Successful Customers
Service Orientation BenefitsDriven by real-world scenarios
Business agility and reduced time to market – request “Backlog” is reduced
Internal and external process efficiencies
Topology Independent
Leverage heterogeneous resources
Independent deployment,versioning, management
Reusable components enable inherent adaptability
Loose coupling, enabling composition of new capabilities
Standards-based interoperability
Agenda• Update on Microsoft’s ‘Real-World’ Philosophy
to Service Oriented Architecture
• Delivering on SOA today with the release of BizTalk 2006 R2
• Expanding the boundaries and impact of SOA tomorrow and in the future
The Connected Enterprise
BizTalk ServerEvolution of a Platform
XML B2B
EAI (partner adapters)
Vertical B2B
BPM
Partner Adapters
SOA/ESB
Adaptersin Box
HostIntegration
SOA/ESB
BPM
Extend B2B (+EDI/AS2)
RFID
V5BizTalk Server
2006 R2
V4BizTalk Server 2006
V3BizTalk Server 2004
V2BizTalk
Server 2002V1
BizTalk Server 2000
500Customers
2,000Customers
4,000Customers
7,000Customers
• General availability of BizTalk Server 2006 R2
• Availability of Microsoft’s ESB Guidance
• Microsoft BizTalk Adapter Pack
Announcing
ESB GuidanceBusiness Process Alliance solutions for modeling, workflow, simulation and rules
BizTalk Server 2006 R2
“Enterprise Proven”
WCF support for WS* standardsNative integration of IBM midrange and mainframeBizTalk Adapter Pack enables LOB access across .NET
“Simplify Interoperability”
“Edge of the Enterprise”
Supply-chain ScenariosNative EDI + AS2 SupportB2B vertical standards support HIPAA, HL7, SWIFT, RosettaNet
RFID/Branch ScenariosComplete RFID infrastructureNew Branch Edition SKU
Enterprise Proven• Over 7,000 customers worldwide• 90% of the Fortune Global 100• 12 of the 15 largest Retailers in the World• 9 of the 10 largest Insurance Companies in the World
Simplify Interoperability
PeopleSoftJD EdwardsOneWorld XEJD EdwardsEnterprise1Oracle ODBCSiebelTIBCO
RendezvousTIBCO EMSSAPEDI/AS2
X12 and EDIFACT supportDrummond Interoperability Certification
MQ MSMQWSEHTTPSMTPFileFTPPOP3 SOAPSWIFTHL7RosettaNetHIPAASQLWCF AdapterSharePoint
Host Applications IBM mainframe zSeries (CICS and IMS) Midrange iSeries(AS/400)
IBM DB2 Mainframe DB2for z/OSMidrange DB2/400DB2 Universal Database for open platforms (AIX, Linux, Solaris,and Windows)
Host Files
BizTalk Server – “Adapters In the Box”
• Partner add-on for BizTalk• OSB 1.0 (OverheidsServiceBus) compliant• Fully integrated BizTalk ebMS pipeline
component• Available in July 2008
AnnouncingebXML Message Service Adapter for BizTalk 2006 R2
Agenda
• Update on Microsoft’s ‘Real-World’ Philosophy to Service Oriented Architecture
• Delivering on SOA today with the release of BizTalk 2006 R2
• Expanding the boundaries and impact of SOA tomorrow and in the future
Crossing Boundaries
Sales
Management
Engineering
Customers
Partners
SaaS Provider
SaaS Provider
New Application Styles
Traditional Cross Boundary
Logic Transactions Process
Architecture Tight Loose
Components Objects Services
Identity Domain Federated
Tools Imperative Declarative
Development Code Assemble
Participants IT Business + IT
Our Approach
Client Server
Cloud
●Rules
Our Approach
Developer
●Requirements ●Design
●Health
IT Pro
ArchitectBusinessAnalyst
●Process
●Deployment ●Workflow
●ContractsBenefits
CommunicationRelationshipsEnd to End ViewSkill SetEcosystem
Agility
Our Approach
TCO
Productivity
10X
Office Business Applications
20072007
2008
Product Roadmap
3.5
“6”
Services “1”
“10”
“5”
“4”
Delivering the Vision
A New Way to Build Applications
10XOslo
Building an Application
1. Create models 2. Store and share models
4. Deploy, execute, manage the application 3. Add components
Summary
• Our aim is to help customers build applications that span from the Enterprise to the Internet – delivering real business value
• BizTalk Server 2006 R2 helps achieve this today by extending the connected enterprise
• We have a unique vision to make modeling a mainstream part of application development for the future
© 2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries.
The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after
the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.