Posted by nick32ya, at 02:20PM 04/26/09 and by 5 others:
http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/redirect?source=rss&url=http://www.infoworld.com/article/09/04/02/iTKO_touts_Web_20_virtualization_in_test_product_1.html
Note:
iTKO on Thursday is offering an upgrade to its Lisa product for services testing, validation and governance, touting capabilities for Web 2.0 applications and virtualization. Geared to architectures like SOA. as well as to business process management, Lisa version 4.6 includes service virtualization for simulating a testing environment and enhanced UI testing support for rich Internet application and Web 2.0 application delivery models. Increased governance and policy validation is offered for composite applications in SOA, BPM, and cloud environments. [ Related. : iTKO was noted in InfoWorld's "How to handle SOA vendor consolidation" report in 2008. ] The product integrates with registry/repositories such as Systinet. "We become the policy validation engine," said John Michelsen, founder and chief architect at iTKO. Version 4.6 enables automated modeling and simulation of inaccessible or unavailable IT resources into IT virtual test environments for development and testing purposes.
tags: virtualization
· touts
· virtualization in test product
· product
· itko
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Posted by nick32ya, at 02:18PM 04/26/09 :
http://feeds.cadenhead.org/~r/workbench/~3/jJI_mpgX_AA/lemonyellows-heather-anne-halpert-back
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Warning: In order to find this blog entry exciting, you must have been on the web for at least 81 Internet years (nine in human reckoning). A decade ago this July, the New York Times. published a profile of Heather Anne Halpert. , a charmingly offbeat writer sharing her stray thoughts and experiences on a blog. But nobody called them blogs back then, so reporter Katie Hafner had trouble explaining Halpert's site, which she described as an "intellectual layer cake." (If that name had caught on, we'd all be called cakers.) From Hafner's piece: Once in a great while a Web site appears, seemingly out of nowhere, and casts a spell. Such is the case with Lemonyellow.com, an on-line intellectual diary that makes the reader want to dig deeper and deeper. Ms. Halpert began the site, at www.lemonyellow.com. , last April as a repository "for all of the ideas and ephemera that would otherwise pop off the top of my head and float away," she said. Every evening, she writes down whatever may have
tags: lemonyellow s heather anne halpert is back
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