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>Moving a wall and adding a toilet CAN be SOA. Yes, it CAN be. Heck, I'll argue perhaps it SHOULD be. But for may iSeries shops the reality is they're not allowed to use something simple like a trigger, or SQL because too many people wouldn't understand it, and it would take "too long." SOA isn't going to be on the table for years. SOA is going to have the same problem CASE tools and OO design had before it. The payback -- and it's a big one -- doesn't come on the first and second use, it comes on the 10th and 11th. Many shops are pressed for enough time to "do it right" using the tools they have now, to get enough time from management to do something that _will_ add to the timeline for the first use (even if it saves _huge_ time and money down the line) is a nearly impossible sell. SOA also has an uphill battle because it's not visual. I don't mean there aren't visual tools to help you, I mean SOA is an architecture, not a presentation (as you well know). This makes it hard to sell to the "higher-ups." I've seen numerous cases where web applications (and client/server before it) were frowned upon until some programmer stayed late and make a crappy, but cute, visual interface to sales inquiry. He showed it so management and they literally saw the light. SOA has no such sales mechanism. -Walden
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