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Web Services And Service-Oriented Architecture by Douglas K. Barry β€” book cover
Web Programming/Development, Networking & Telecommunications, Internet & World Wide Web, Enterprise Computing Systems

Web Services And Service-Oriented Architecture

by Douglas K. Barry, Patrick J. Gannon
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Overview

Web services are leading to the use of more packaged software either as an internal service or an external service available over the Internet. These services, which will be connected together to create the information technology systems of the future, will require less custom software in our organizations and more creativity in the connections between the services. This book begins with a high-level example of how an average person in an organization might interact with a service-oriented architecture. As the book progresses, more technical detail is added in a "peeling of the onion" approach. The leadership opportunities within these developing service-oriented architectures are also explained. At the end of the book there is a compendium or "pocket library" for software technology related to service-oriented architectures.

Β· Only web services book to cover both data management and software engineering perspectives, excellent resource for ALL members of IT teams
Β· Jargon free, highly illustrated, with introduction that anyone can read that then leads into increasing technical detail
Β· Provides a set of leadership principles and suggested application for using this technology.

Synopsis

Web services are leading to the use of more packaged software either as an internal service or an external service available over the Internet. These services, which will be connected together to create the information technology systems of the future, will require less custom software in our organizations and more creativity in the connections between the services. This book begins with a high-level example of how an average person in an organization might interact with a service-oriented architecture. As the book progresses, more technical detail is added in a "peeling of the onion" approach. The leadership opportunities within these developing service-oriented architectures are also explained. At the end of the book there is a compendium or "pocket library" for software technology related to service-oriented architectures.

· Only web services book to cover both data management and software engineering perspectives, excellent resource for ALL members of IT teams
· Jargon free, highly illustrated, with introduction that anyone can read that then leads into increasing technical detail
· Provides a set of leadership principles and suggested application for using this technology.

About the Author, Douglas K. Barry

Douglas K. Barry, Executive Director of the ODMG and theeditor of Release 3.0, has worked in database technology for overtwenty years. As Principal of Barry & Associates, he is also theauthor of Object Database Handbook: How to Select, Implement, andUse Object-Oriented Databases and XML Data Servers: An Infrastructure for Effectively Using XML in Electronic Commerce,and for many years he was the Databases columnist in Object Magazineand the ODBMS columnist in Distributed Computing Magazine.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"The discussion on the common beliefs about enterprise architectures and how they relate to Web services is a gem and worth the price of the book. Similarly insightful chapters cover the impact of Web services on the enterprise, adoption steps and change management issues in implementing Web services projects. This a great book that every manager contemplating a Web services project should read." - Toufic Boubez, Ph.D., Author of "Building Web Services with Java: Making Sense of XML, SOAP, WSDL and UDDI"

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2003
Publisher
Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc.
Pages
245
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781558609068

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