For the next few months I will be working on a special project with the Platform Architecture team in our Developer & Platform Evangelism group. We will be working on a project that will provide proof-points and guidance packages for Multi-Enterprise Business Applications “in the cloud” (or Project MEBA).
With the announcements and work being done around Windows Azure and the Azure Services Platform, we believe there will be a resurgence in business-to-business (B2B) computing in a way that hasn’t been possible before. With this project we’ll work to define the capabilities and patterns businesses can gain by moving their business partner integration to Windows Azure.
You can see some of this work as its already been highlighted in the Microsoft Professional Developers Conference (PDC) keynote (skip to 59:00), as well as a break-out session by Wade Wegner and Jack Greenfield on how they built the MEBA demo. Jack is the Project Lead and brainchild behind this project. Wade served as DevLead for Phase 1 of the project. He worked alongside David Chou, Program Manager, and a development team in India to produce the initial results. My role is to serve as DevLead for Phase 2 of the project and continue exploring the possibilities with the Azure platform.
I will have the fortunate opportunity to work alongside the Windows Azure and Azure Services Platform product groups, as well as our Senior Platform Architects in DPE. In addition, my duties will be to manage a team of developers in India that will assist in the some of the coding efforts. This is where technologies like Visual Studio Team System and Team Foundation Server are going to come in handy.
With this opportunity, I plan to bring you along. The idea is to start a developer diary and to capture all of progress (good and bad) as we play with these new bits to determine some best practices for utilizing the Azure platform for B2B communications, workflows and functionality.
My project participation started this past Monday with Jack Greenfield and myself serving as booth babes at the National Retail Foundation Big Show to showcase the work the team has done in partnership with Red Prairie (a supply chain solutions provider) in Phase 1 of the project. This particular scenario focused on the business problem of product recall. The difficulty in this particular scenario is having the capability to communicate with business partners to pull product out of the supply chain when a quality issue has been discovered. Currently, Red Prairie works with its customers to set up numerous private data lines between business partners and maintaining those lines for communication needs. A very costly piece of the solution offering. With Azure, we can use the Internet Services Bus to facilitate the necessary communication between business partners and have the opportunity to host workflow processes “in the cloud”.
We met with a number of retail customers that were interested in the prospects, as well as a number of ISV’s who were interested in moving their business solutions to the Azure platform. However, we’re in the infancy of Azure. There is still quite a bit to work out on the technical front. The team I will be working with over the course of the next few months will be working alongside the Azure product group teams to put a business solution in place as they fine tune the technology bits.
It’s a great opportunity for me and a great opportunity for you to participate in this adventure along with us. Stay tuned!