| By Jeremy Geelan | Article Rating: |
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| August 30, 2004 12:00 AM EDT | Reads: |
21,785 |
Adam Bosworth, who recently moved from app server giant BEA to search colossus Google, is now working on very different types of software.
"Rather than worrying about what the IT of large corporations needs to do to support the corporation," he writes in a recent blog, "I'm worrying about mere mortals. In fact, my Mom."
Say what? Bosworth explains.
"I never find that I can build any software if I don't first get some mental image in my head of the customers," he writes. "Who are they? How do they look, feel, think? I call this designing by guilt because if you don't do what feels right for these customers, you feel guilty for having let them down. Of course, customers are endlessly disparate, complex, heterogenous, and distinct. But even so, I've always found it necessary to think about a small number of distinct types of customers, and then design for them."
"And boy is it satisfying to do this when the people you are designing for are your friends, family, relatives, your smart alec son, and so on and when even your mother can use what you build," Bosworth continues.
"I call this the mom factor," he adds. "It is corny but fun."
Then follows a rumination about Web services in general.
"It is interesting to me how this focus around simplicity in the services world could carry through even to the plumbing people use. For example take so called Web services. The original impetus behind XML, at least as far as I was concerned back in 1996, was a way to exchange data between programs so that a program could become a service for another program. I saw this as a very simple idea. Send me a message of type A and I'll agree to send back messages of types B, C, or D depending on your A. If the message is a simple query, send it as a URL with a query string.
In the services world, this has become XML over HTTP much more than so called "Web services" with their huge and complex panoply of SOAP specs and standards. Why? Because it is easy and quick. Virtually anyone can build such requests. Heck, you can test them using a browser. That's really the big thing. Anyone can play. You don't have to worry about any of the complexity of WSDL or WS-TX or WS-CO. Since most users of SOAP today don't actually use SOAP standards for reliability (too fragmented) or asynchrony (even more so) or even security (too complex), what are they getting from all this complex overhead. Well, for one, it is a lot slower. The machinery for cracking a query string in a URL is about as fast as one can imagine these days due to the need services have to be quick. The machinery for processing a SOAP request is probably over ten times as slow (that's a guess). Formatting the response, of course, doesn't actually require custom XML machinery. If you can return HTML, you can return XML. It is this sort of thinking that being at a service company engenders. How do you keep it really simple, really lightweight, and really fast. Sure, you can still support the more complex things, but the really useful things may turn out to be simplest ones.You have to. The scale is orders of magnitudes more than is normally processed by a business process within even the largest corporation. It is hard enough to build these massively scalable services if you keep the moving parts simple, clear, and down to a small number. This is usually called the KISS principle as in keep it simple and stupid or, more rudely, keep it simple, stupid. It reflects the engineering realization that just delivering on the required speed and scale will require a lot of plumbing and monitoring as it is."
Bosworth ends his blog in chirpy fashion: "So, I'm having a lot of fun learning about a whole new world."
Google has acquired one of the foremost minds in modern i-technology, and it knows it.
Published August 30, 2004 Reads 21,785
Copyright © 2004 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Jeremy Geelan
Jeremy Geelan is President & COO of Cloud Expo, Inc. and Conference Chair of the worldwide Cloud Expo series. He appears regularly at conferences and trade shows, speaking to technology audiences both in North America and overseas. He is executive producer and presenter of Cloud Expo's "Power Panels" on SYS-CON.TV.
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Roland Tanglao 08/30/04 09:01:12 AM EDT | |||
so Roger, are you using RPC style SOAP? i think so having worked at a big company for over 10 years, I understand the corporate need for complicated standards like non RPC style SOAP but in the real world easy to use standards like RPC style SOAP and GETing and POSTing bits of XML are what people actually understand and therefore implement anyways i am just a humble ex developer if people like Tim Bray and Bosworth say SOAP''s too complicated, then it probably is in my experience non rpc style SOAP is too complicated |
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Roger Benningfield 08/30/04 08:59:52 AM EDT | |||
SOAP standards do get used. When Macromedia released Coldfusion MX, they tightly integrated SOAP-RPC into the language, and gave Flash the same capabilities. So building a SOAP service in CFMX is as simple as creating this file: [cfcomponent] ...and calling it with a URL like: All of the SOAP plumbing is automatically constructed for me... I don''t even need to think about it. It just works. Can''t get much simpler than that. |
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