says Google will get each of the superior ones? has hired Donald Ferguson, the "father of WebSphere,
microsoft office Professional Plus 2007 cd key," to work in Microsoft's Office of the Chief Technology Officer (CTO) with Ray Ozzie, as reported by the .Net Developer's Journal. exactly, will Ferguson do in his new role as technical fellow in the "Platforms and Strategy" area? description, posted on the Microsoft Web site on January 8, is short on specifics: on both the evolutionary and revolutionary role of information technology in business. Understanding the trends, architecting and piloting the implications for existing and new products and evangelizing Microsoft’s vision are the key aspects of Don’s job." IBM, where he was on 53 fellows,
Angebote office 2007, Ferguson served as chief architect for IBM's software group. In addition to being chief architect for the WebSphere family of products, Ferguson helped guide IBM's strategy for SOA (service-oriented architecture) and Web services. to get a handle on exactly what WebSphere is. (It's kind of like .Net,
microsoft office 2010 Home And Student product key, both an ever-changing brand, plus a set of technologies.) WebSphere is everything from an application server, to an IBM synonym for middleware. on Ferguson's blog on IBM DeveloperWorks (which Ferguson, understandably,
microsoft office 2010 Home And Student x86, hasn't updated for several months),
office Professional 32bit, it's possible to get a sense of the kinds of priorities and projects in which Ferguson is interested. From his post "Software in the Next Five Years," Ferguson lists the top ten trends/hot spots as: appliances and SW configurations integrated with virtual middleware applications and end-user Web programming enterprise SW architecture that includes open source, very good enough middleware and products from IBM and other companies and business policy/rules Applications and Business Services evolving to exploit next generation HW, e.g. multi-core and intelligent network storage. and EDA (electronic-design automation) web approach to data and storage Patterns and Templates is exploring all of these areas itself, even the inevitable integration of open-source into enterprise software architectures. It's a fair guess Ferguson will be helping to create Microsoft policies and products in these very general categories. looks like Ferguson will be the same kind of behind-the-curtain mystery exec as Ozzie. not like blogging. It is not because I do not have the time or 'do not get the Web,'" Ferguson blogged last year. "I don't like talking. My nickname in college was 'Silent Don.' I am from rural New England." Microsoft for a chance to chat with Ferguson. I'm not holding my breath.