Hence, the current complex architecture conditions demand meticulous analysis efforts
to facilitate the discovery of new services and encourage the reusability of our current legacy technological
landscape. So how can we continue to embark on new projects and business initiatives
given that our worlds are not as perfect as we may have imagined them to be?
In his 1956 book The World of Mathematics, James R. Newman, a mathematical historian,
provided his interpretation of group theory1:
The theory of groups is a branch of mathematics in which one does something to something
and then compares the results with the result of doing the same thing to something else, or
something else to the same thing.
Newman??™s introduction to group theory reflected the challenges facing many scientists in
the nineteenth century. They studied the interrelationships between group members, their commonalities,
their collective influence on the environment, and their transformation from autonomous
entities to group constituents.
The time has come to assess whether the problem domain can be resolved by the proposed
conceptual entities that were founded in the service conceptualization phase, by legacy systems,
by solution services currently operating in production environments, and by services that are
still in their early life cycle stages. Service-oriented projects are not always about building new
executables.
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