DCSIMG
Managed Services Engine - June 2008 CTP - Adlai Maschiach

Adlai Maschiach

" You have to show in order to be seen "

News

Favorite Links

news

CardSpace

Books

Other InfoCards Proj

Virtual Earth

WSS / Sharepoint

SOA , Biztalk & ESB

CLR / .NET

Managed Services Engine - June 2008 CTP

Managed Services Engine - June 2008 CTP

The Managed Services Engine is a solution that supports service virtualization through a meta data-driven service repository using .NET and Microsoft SQL Server.

MSE

Overview

The Managed Services Engine (MSE) is one approach to facilitating Enterprise SOA through service virtualization. Built upon the Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) and the Microsoft Server Platform, the MSE was developed by Microsoft Services as we helped customers address the challenges of SOA in the enterprise.
The MSE fully enables service virtualization through a Service Repository, which helps organizations deploy services faster, coordinate change management, and maximize the reuse of various service elements. In doing so, the MSE provides the ability to support versioning, abstraction, management, routing, and runtime policy enforcement for Services.

OpVerScreen

Status & Roadmap

The June 2008 CTP Release is the second release of the MSE in what will continue to be an evolving solution on CodePlex. The intent of this version is to solicit feedback on the architecture, the components, their application, and the documentation. We will make periodic announcements concerning updates and upcoming releases. We appreciate the many comments and suggestions we have received on the October 2007 release and look forward to continued feedback and input.

Comments

hussie said:

As per the above mentioned article is really very useful to all and i would like to share few words on enterprise managed services expertise in Manages Services do for your organization? – help manage your IT infrastructure without you losing control; Less complexity on managing and scalability;help ensure data availability and security;finally, a size able reduction in cost.

# November 16, 2009 9:07 AM
Leave a Comment

(required) 

(required) 

(optional)

(required) 


Enter the numbers above: