IT Architectures and Middleware: Strategies for Building Large, Integrated Systems
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.15 (777 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0201709074 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 336 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2014-03-07 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
He has worked in IT for the last twenty-seven years doing a variety of jobs—programming, technical support, system software design, program management, technical consultancy, and even marketing. More recently he has been spending his time developing an IT modeling tool.. Chris Britton is an independent consultant, specializing in IT architecture
There is little mathematics except for back-of-the-envelope style calculations to illustrate a few points. To add to our woes, we are now considering integrating multiple systems, each of which was a challenge to develop in the first place, and each of which is changing at a different speed, driven ever faster by the business. Anyone with IT architect as part of their roles and responsibilities should know everything in this book. When you buy a package, you buy an IT architecture, albeit only in the context of the package functionality. If you are intending to use it for reference, and don't intend to read it through first, I encourage you to read at least chapters 1, 6, 10, 11, and 15. The topics areRemote p
A rare book that fully serves beginners & expreienced pros This book is for two audiences: (1)Those who need a quick course in IT architectures in general and e-commerce architectures in particular, and (2)experienced IT architects who want to further their professional knowledge. I know this sounds like a near-impossible order for a 296 page book, but the author manages to pull off the near impossible.My ba. A light lunch that left me hungry for more Robert Hoeppner To me, the book seems like a skeletal outline with emaciated meat on its bones. The pace is relatively quick. The style is conversational without being precious. The author occasionally does put forth some of his preferences for general architectural decisions, but there is no blatant favoritism toward one side of specific decisions like EJB vs .NET.. An influential book abut the real problems of big systems This is one of those influential books which may make you start to think about problems in a different way. A lot of books about architecture concentrate on simple examples and small-scale problems, and you get the feeling that's all the authors know about. Many books which do address large systems assume that you are building on a greenfield si
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