SOA for the Business Developer: Concepts, BPEL, and SCA (Business Developers series)
August 25, 2010 by BPELforum · 3 Comments
SOA for the Business Developer: Concepts, BPEL, and SCA (Business Developers series)
ISBN13: 9781583470657
Condition: New
Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed
Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) is a way of organizing software. If your company’s development projects adhere to the principles of [...]
Batch Processing in a Services World
July 22, 2010 by Tom_Laszewski · Leave a Comment
This article will explain how BPEL and job schedulers (most recently branded as Workload Automation
suites) provide an integrated solution that can satisfy the needs of batch and real time processing in a
services-orientated infrastructure. Industry leading distributed job schedulers, workload automation
(WLA) products, are offered from UC4, Orsyp, CISCO and Advanced Systems Concept, Inc. Oracle
offers an industry [...]
Implementing SOA Using Java EE
April 29, 2010 by BPELforum · Leave a Comment
Product Description The Practitioner’s Guide to Implementing SOA with Java EE Technologies This book brings together all the practical insight you need to successfully architect enterprise solutions and implement them using SOA and Java EE technologies. Writing for senior IT developers, strategists, and enterprise architects, the authors cover everything from concepts [...]
Web Services
April 28, 2010 by BPELforum · 5 Comments
Product DescriptionLike many other incipient technologies, Web services are still surrounded by a tremendous level of noise. This noise results from the always dangerous combination of wishful thinking on the part of research and industry and of a lack of clear understanding of how Web services came to be. On the one hand, multiple contradictory [...]
Data Processing Has Changed Over Time
April 28, 2010 by BPELforum · Leave a Comment
Data Processing has changed greatly over time. While one can track the beginnings of the modern analytical computer to Charles Babbage (1791-1871), we really saw the beginning of modern day information systems during World War II when they were used as code busters. After the war, few anticipated how much computers would affect our lives. [...]













