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4.5.1 Rebuilding the Tower of Babel The Case for a Unified Architecture Framework
Author(s) -
Hause Matthew
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
incose international symposium
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2334-5837
DOI - 10.1002/j.2334-5837.2013.tb03099.x
Subject(s) - interoperability , architecture , process (computing) , computer science , task (project management) , architecture framework , history of architecture , limiting , engineering , process management , systems engineering , world wide web , history , archaeology , operating system , mechanical engineering
The book of Genesis tells the story of how the peoples of the earth came together to build an enormous tower. To confound them in their task, God changed the languages of the different groups of people so that they were unable to communicate. Since they could not coordinate their efforts, the project was abandoned and the different groups dispersed throughout the world. The same problem exists today in the world of Enterprise Architecture Frameworks. Although they express similar concepts, interchange between the different frameworks is awkward at best, time consuming, and leads to misunderstanding and miscommunication. This lack of communication was highlighted in a recent report on the conflict in Afghanistan, where the lack of interchange of architectures was cited as a limiting factor in coalition efforts and may have contributed to loss of life. This paper will assess the current situation, examine international efforts to solve it, and identify future challenges. This will include: The role of standards for collaboration and communication Standards and standards organizations The Object Management Group (OMG) A brief history of Military Architectural Frameworks The interoperability problems of frameworks The Unified Architecture Framework (UAF) effort Using reference architectures to define a common conceptual “dictionary” Systems engineering, acquisition, and process Vertical and horizontally complementary emerging standards Future problems and potential solutions.