Saturday, November 5, 2011

NIST Release Cloud Computing standards, guidelines and Final Reference Architecture

http://bit.ly/vlLcdL

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has been designated by Federal Chief Information Officer Vivek Kundra to research and accelerate the adoption of the cloud computing model. As such, they have released their findings which seem to look a great deal like the IBM Cloud Computing Reference Architecture.

Still, this promises to cause Cloud Computing engagements to heat up, and consequently, more architecture and design opportunities for many of us who are willing to embrace the change. Please visit the link and take a look the NIST site for their latest updates.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Resource for Early-career IT Architects & Aspirants

Resource for New & Aspiring IT Architects:

https://wiki.sei.cmu.edu/sad/index.php/Main_Page

This site covers the implementation of the material explained in the Software Engineering Institute Series book "Documenting Software Architecture: Views and Beyond". It acts as a respository for the material of both 1st and 2nd addition. I highly recommend spending some time on this sight for early career architects and aspirants [such as myself] who may need a deeper understanding of what their deliverable requirements truly are, and the expectation of what they should possibly look like.


Thursday, July 7, 2011

Infrastructure Architecture Building Blocks

Here is the link to a subject that is near and dear to my heart:


For those of you not envolved in the Infrastructure Architecture process, this can help you to gain some understanding of what is involved.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

IT Architect Mentorship

http://bit.ly/mvBuKS

Iasa has the only world-class mentoring solution for architects and architecture teams in enterprise and technology architecture. We have world-class mentors including Iasa Fellows and Certified IT Architect Professionals. Don't forget to ask us about our corporate mentoring programs for architect capability and team development.


The program gives you a year to work with as many mentors as you would like. The mentoring sessions last 60 days (2 full months) and allow you to develop specific skills to help you in your day to day work. Each mentoring session will provide you many opportunities to work with experienced architects in the following areas:

  • Focus Area: Business Architecture, Enterprise Architecture, Information Architecture, Infrastructure Architecture and Software Architecture
  • Industry: Retail, Grocery, Insurance, Defense, Banking, etc.
  • Skill Area: Valuation Techniques, Presentation Skills, UML, Design, Architecture Descriptions, Leadership, Security, Reliability, etc.
  • Next-Generation Technology: SOA, Cloud Computing, Mobility, Data Center, etc.
The program officially kicks off on August 1st, 2011 but we are only accepting 60 candidates in the first round. As an early adopter you will get additional time with mentors, the chance to work directly with the Board of Education and the Iasa thought leadership, and the opportunity to lock down mentoring with the worlds top architects. Additional candidates will be accepted after the first 30 days.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

New Facilitators

Greetings fellow IT architects ! Many of you will have noticed that Craig S. is in need of a hiatus and has asked for assistance in moving our agenda forward. I, along with James, have accepted the challenge, endeavoring to do the very best that we can to keep our membership learning and growing.

In support of this effort, I would ask that each of you take a few moments out of your busy schedule and tell us what it is that you would like us to discuss in our meetings. Are there topics that you would like to see re-visited? Issues that you would like to see covered that have not been discussed yet? This is your group, and we can only make it as great as you would like for it to be.
Let's hear from you.

- Donovan Johnson

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

No ColARC until further notice

There will not be a ColARC meeting in May, or following, until I can find someone to organize them.

Family circumstances (good ones!) are preventing me from organizing ColARC or even attending any evening events. Anybody want to help?

Monday, March 14, 2011

April Meeting Announcement: AOGEA 2011 First Quarter Meeting

Please join the 2011 first quarter meeting of The Association for Open Group Enterprise Architects (AOGEA), Ohio chapter, whose purpose is to advance the enterprise architecture profession and professional excellence in IT Architecture in the Ohio region.

The meeting will be on Thursday, April 07, from 6-8 p.m., at 5515 Parkcenter Circle Dublin, OH 43017, in the Ivory Conference Room.

Agenda for the meeting:

  • Registration and snacks
  • Value of EA, Utilities Industry
    Pablo Vegas, CIO of AEP
  • EA experience
    Srini Krish, CTO J.P.Morgan Chase
  • A Plan For All Seasons - Achieving Strategic Alignment Through EA
    WebAge Solutions
  • Q & A
  • Vote of thanks

Tickets for the event are free, but you need to register to attend.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Join Us on April 7th for a Joint Meeting with AOGEA Ohio

The next ColARC meeting will be a joint meeting with AOGEA Ohio on Thursday, 7 April. Location and speakers will be announced soon!

Thursday, January 27, 2011

No meeting in February

We will not have a meeting in February due to lack of a speaker. Please feel free to suggest speakers for future meetings! The next meeting will be a joint meeting with AOGEA Ohio, probably in March. The date will be announced here when it is set.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Next ColArc Meeting: February 1st

Many thanks to the 40 or so people who came to our November meeting! Our next meeting will be February 1. Happy New Year!

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

September Meeting: Architecture *is* the Business

What would you do if you were CEO for a month? What if you suddenly had to answer directly to your customers, your stockholders, your board, your employees – what would you do first, then what would you do next? If you are an IT architect and several major business initiatives and various impact scenarios didn’t just run through your mind, then perhaps you should consider broadening your perspective. Forward-thinking companies hold architects accountable for business progress and impact well outside of the IT domain. Because the practice of architecture crosses organizational and functional boundaries, architects are uniquely positioned to drive investment strategy, identify revenue opportunities, and reduce cost/risk for the enterprise. In this session we’ll explore a model designed to help IT architects expand their role to optimally drive business and technology strategy, describe the steps architects need to take to jump-start business transformation, and provide lessons-learned along the way.

This presentation is a recording from the 2009 ITARC conference in New York City. The speaker, Angela Yochem, will be joining us via Skype to answer questions after the presentation.

ANGELA YOCHEM is an executive in a multinational technology company, a thought leader in architecture practices and large-scale technology management, and the author of “Event Driven Architecture – How SOA Enables the Real-Time Enterprise”. Angela has held senior leadership roles in Fortune 50 companies where she drove technology transformation based on business objectives. Prior to her executive roles, Angela specialized in design and delivery of large-scale distributed systems and solutions to complex integration and convergence challenges. She has extensive B2B and B2C commerce implementation experience, with a foundation in systems design and network design and management of multicampus networks. Angela is the author of J2EE and WebLogic Server, 2nd Edition and is an IASA Fellow and an US Patent holder. Angela serves on executive boards and is a regular speaker at events and forums in the United States and abroad.

The presentation will be on Tuesday, September 7th, at 6:00 p.m, at ICC, 2500 Corporate Exchange Drive, Suite 310, Columbus, OH 43231, on the third floor. The meetings are always free, and we usually give away books and other door prizes.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

August Meeting Announcement

Defensible .NET

ASP.NET and the .NET framework have become a preferred foundation underlying enterprise applications. While Microsoft has prioritized integrating security into the ASP.NET framework, attacks at the application layer are dramatically increasing. How effective are the security controls built into the ASP.NET framework? Application architects must understand the limitations of the framework and ensure that code is secure. Focusing on the OWASP top ten, Jason Montgomery will explain the latest defensive techniques specific to the ASP.NET environment, and discuss the importance and challenges of building security into the organization’s software development lifecycle.

About the speaker

Jason Montgomery is Sr. Security Specialist at Active Technologies Group, Inc. (ATGi). He is a SANS instructor in .NET application security and co-author of the secure coding certification, GSSP.NET. Jason has spent the past five years guiding software security practices at the Department of Defense, and currently leads ATGi’s secure software development and assessment practice.

Location

The presentation will be on Tuesday, August 3rd, at 6:00 p.m, at ICC, 2500 Corporate Exchange Drive, Suite 310, Columbus, OH 43231, on the third floor. The meetings are always free, and we usually give away books and other door prizes.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Friday, July 2, 2010

Reminder: Creating a Data Model for Your Enterprise

Want to cripple business agility and make developers miserable? A poorly-designed and maintained data model will do all that and more. If you'd prefer to build a maintainable data architecture, come hear Jason Tiret present "Modeling for Your Enterprise" this coming Tuesday, July 6, at 6:00 p.m.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Jason Tiret Presents Modeling for Your Enterprise on July 6

Most small to medium organizations place a premium on development and deliverables rather than documentation and architecture. While this may be great to get the business started, things can quickly spiral out of control as new systems are put in place.

Jason Tiret, Director of Modeling and Architecture Solutions for Embarcadero Technologies, will be the featured presenter for the July meeting of the Columbus Architecture Group. This session will teach the user how to build a practical data architecture strategy from the ground up!

Jason's presentation, called "Modeling for Your Enterprise," will include the top 5 best practices for using data models to capture metadata effectively and support key enterprise initiatives such as Business Intelligence, Data Architecture, Data Warehousing, Governance and Compliance, and SOA. Jason lives in California and will be presenting and answering questions via LiveMeeting, just for Columbus Architecture Group.

The presentation will be held Tuesday, July 6, at 6:00 p.m, at ICC, 2500 Corporate Exchange Drive, Suite 310, Columbus, OH 43231. The meetings are always free, and we usually give away books and other door prizes.

Friday, May 28, 2010

June 1 Meeting: Can Developers and Management to See Eye to Eye on Nonfunctional Requirements and Technical Debt?

Deciding between spending development time working on flashy new features, paying back technical debt, or implementing so-called "nonfunctional requirements" can be a source of tension between developers and business managers. Some authors suggest ways to argue in favor of paying back technical debt.

Of course, sometimes it's appropriate to take on technical debt or defer working on nonfunctional changes. Architects can do better than just being ready to counter arguments against spending time on these issues when they come up. Well-managed technical debt is part of a software design. A good architect needs to consider technical issues in light of business needs. Not surprisingly, visibility and communication are the keys to doing this successfully.

On Tuesday, June 1, at 6:00 p.m., at ICC, 2500 Corporate Exchange Drive, Suite 310, Columbus, OH 43231, we'll examine this issue in more depth. How can a team leader bridge communication gaps between developers and business management? What are effective ways of managing nonfunctional requirements? When does it make sense to take on technical debt, and why?

Saturday, May 1, 2010

May Meeting Announcement

The next Columbus Architecture Group meeting will be on Tuesday May 4th, at 6:00 p.m., at ICC,2500 Corporate Exchange Drive, Suite 310, Columbus, OH 43231.

The Case for Cloud Computing: What is Azure, and Why would I use it?

Is cloud computing the rage? Is it the new buzz? What if we have been doing it for years, and we didn’t even know. Let’s talk about the how’s and why’s to arm you to use critical thought in your own environment to see if and when cloud computing might help you out.

Brian Prince

Brian H. Prince is an Architect Evangelist for Microsoft.

He gets super excited whenever he talks about technology, especially cloud computing, patterns, and practices. His job is to help customers strategically leverage MS technology, and help them bring their architecture to a super level.

In a past life Brian was a part of super startups, super marketing firms, and super consulting firms. Much of his super architecture background includes building super scalable applications, application integration, and award winning web applications. All of them were super.

Further, he is a co-founder of the non-profit organization CodeMash (www.codemash.org). He speaks at various regional and national technology events including TechEd. He only wishes his job didn’t require him to say ‘super’ so much.

Brian holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Computer Science and Physics from Capital University, Columbus, Ohio. He is also a zealous gamer. For example, he is a huge fan of Fallout 3.