Difference between revisions of "SOAWP Benefits of a combined SOA & IHE approach"
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(New page: IHE SOA White Paper == Benefits of a combined SOA & IHE approach == == Discussion == place issues to be discussed among the editorial team here... == Change Requ...) |
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== Discussion == | == Discussion == | ||
− | + | * If PIX and PDQ are read as profiles, there are 5 pages of functional description, very high level, and 95 pages giving every detail of every transaction. HSSP spends 95 pages on functional description and operation semantics, and 5 pages on what could happen on the wire – the latter may be barely described. Would PIX/PDQ V2 and V3 be identical (in terms of operation semantics)? Probably, however, the service is never described in IHE. | |
+ | * The point of this paper is to bring these two efforts together. | ||
+ | * Facilitating responding to changes in business requirements | ||
+ | * IHE takes what is constant out of the equation | ||
+ | * Adding, replacing, reconfiguring services | ||
+ | * SOA can include interoperability elements in its approach but does not deliver interoperability | ||
+ | * SOA is an implementation approach | ||
== Change Requests == | == Change Requests == | ||
place your change requests here... | place your change requests here... |
Latest revision as of 10:23, 26 January 2009
Benefits of a combined SOA & IHE approach
Discussion
- If PIX and PDQ are read as profiles, there are 5 pages of functional description, very high level, and 95 pages giving every detail of every transaction. HSSP spends 95 pages on functional description and operation semantics, and 5 pages on what could happen on the wire – the latter may be barely described. Would PIX/PDQ V2 and V3 be identical (in terms of operation semantics)? Probably, however, the service is never described in IHE.
- The point of this paper is to bring these two efforts together.
- Facilitating responding to changes in business requirements
- IHE takes what is constant out of the equation
- Adding, replacing, reconfiguring services
- SOA can include interoperability elements in its approach but does not deliver interoperability
- SOA is an implementation approach
Change Requests
place your change requests here...