There are six major service life cycle workflow styles that depict the progression and
behavior of a service during the design-time and run-time seasons. These are the single workflow,
multiple workflow, workflow decomposition, workflow consolidation, conditional workflow, and
time-machine styles.
The service life cycle progress view employs a three-dimensional cube that describes
a service evolution by identifying three major project parameters: life cycle timeline progress,
currently applied season disciplines, and currently practiced continuous disciplines.
There are five iteration view levels that can be employed to perfect serviceoriented
project deliverables: season, design-time, run-time, event, and life cycle.
A life cycle touch-point is a service-oriented project view that enables managers to combine
design-time, run-time, and continuous discipline activities.
PART TWO
SERVICE-ORIENTED CONCEPTUALIZATION
Common service-oriented development challenges typically arise from a lack of business and
technological direction. But even more important, the absence of general guiding principles
and concepts that advise and instruct the development community can hinder the course of a
software development initiative. An abstraction that describes a business requirement, a remedy
to an emerging business or technological concern, or a solution to a problem can alleviate
service-oriented development challenges.
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