Complex web services come under fire

IT managers have difficulty assessing capacity needed to put applications on the internet

Written by Robert Jaques

The complexity of delivering web services may reduce the productivity gains derived from their deployment, according to a poll of 50 IT managers.

Conducted by traffic management system vendor CatchFire Systems, the study found the number one problem when provisioning applications across the internet was assessing the capacity needed.

Applications being deployed on internets and intranets included human resources, supply chain management and customer relationship management, as well as other portal-based applications.

"Enabling web access to corporate applications is an extremely complex process and is proving a nightmare for IT managers to implement," said Nigel Thomas, marketing director at CatchFire Systems (Europe).

"Opening up formerly closed applications to unpredictable usage patterns puts a tremendous strain on total web infrastructure."

Balancing unexpected traffic surges from users of internal web-based applications with demands made by external users and unexpected cross-application interference were cited as particular difficulties.

Respondents also mentioned problems with managing interlocking systems with different peak usage times and understanding the complex interrelationships between multiple applications.

"The issue is that traditional web infrastructure treats all requests equally - whether a business-critical order-taking application or merely browsing the corporate intranet," added Thomas.

Tags:

Further reading

Web services framework moves forward

Oasis rolls with it   More...

The way ahead for web services

The inevitable hype has made it hard for firms to see the true value of web services technology   More...

IT WEEK FOCUS: Web services

Exploring the emerging Web services model and its impact on e-business   More...

Related articles

Comcast relents on BitTorrent limits

Companies sign truce on bandwidth use   More...

3G forces mobile network backhaul upgrades

Backhaul is critical, says ABI Research   More...

IT managers pass the security buck

European SMEs blame employees for security breaches   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

23 Jul 2008

2.99 MBSmall time security, official 'spying' requests and a spammer jail break More...

22 Jul 2008

3.22 MBSat-nav crashes, open source security and female gamers More...

21 Jul 2008

3.12 MBGlobal internet reach, online spending and the space race More...

Poll

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

Are you happy making an online purchase from another European country?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Security

Major DNS flaw revealed

Experts sound alarms over early disclosure   More...

Nintendo DS

Dodgy Chinese Nintendo chargers recalled

Experience could shock some users   More...

Advertisement

Houses of Parliament

Official 'spying' requests top 500,000

Information includes web records and itemised phone bills   More...

Hacking

Small firms naïve about security

SMBs remain prone to attack, says study   More...

Advertisement