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SOA for the Business Developer: Concepts, BPEL, and SCA (Business Developers series)

August 25, 2010 by BPELforum

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 SOA, the outcome will be an inventory of modular units called “services,” which allow for a quick response to change.This book tells the SOA story in a simple, straightforward manner that will help you understand not only the buzzwords and benefits, but also the technologies that underlie SOA: XML, WSDL, SOAP, XPath, BPEL, SCA, and SDO. And through it all, the

Rating: (out of 3 reviews)

List Price: $ 39.95

Price: $ 29.99

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: BPEL, Business, Concepts, Developer, Developers, Series

Batch Processing in a Services World

July 22, 2010 by Tom_Laszewski

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 leading BPEL Process Manager that runs on a variety of Java EE containers.

The full article is here: http://bpelforum.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/BPELWorldArticleBatchProcessingInAServicesWorldv2.pdf

Filed Under: BPEL, BPEL News Tagged With: active batch, appworx, batch, BPEL, ca7, JCL, job scheduling, Legacy, mainframe, Migration, Modernization, Oracle, orsyp, scheduling, SOA, tidal, uc4, Web Services, wma, workload automation

Implementing SOA Using Java EE

April 29, 2010 by BPELforum

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 to implementation, requirements to tools. 

 

The authors first review the Java EE platform’s essential elements in the context of SOA and web services deployment, and demonstrate how Java EE has evolved into the world’s best open source solution for enterprise SOA. After discussing standards such as SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI, they walk through implementing each key aspect of SOA with Java EE. Step by step, you’ll learn how to integrate service-oriented web and business components of Java EE technologies with the help of process-oriented standards such as BPEL/CDL into a coherent, tiered enterprise architecture that can deliver a full spectrum of business services.

 

Implementing SOA Using Java™ EE concludes with a section-length case study that walks through analyzing a company’s requirements, creating an effective SOA architecture, and building a concise proof-of-concept prototype with NetBeans IDE. Coverage includes

•  Using Java EE technologies to simplify SOA implementation

•  Mastering messaging, service descriptions, registries, orchestration, choreography, and other essential SOA concepts

•  Building an advanced web services infrastructure for implementing SOA

•  Using Java Persistence API to provide for persistence

•  Getting started with Java Business Integration (JBI), the new open specification for delivering SOA

•  Implementing SOA at the web and business tiers

•  Developing, configuring, and deploying SOA systems with NetBeans IDE

•  Constructing SOA systems with NetBeans SOA Pack

Implementing SOA Using Java EE

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Advanced Web Services, BPEL, Business Components, Concept Prototype, Concise Proof, Enterprise Architects, Enterprise Architecture, Enterprise Solutions, Full Spectrum, Implementation Requirements, Implementing, Java, Java Business, Open Source Solution, Orchestration, Oriented Web, Proof Of Concept, Service Descriptions, Soa Architecture, Soap Wsdl, using, Using Java, Web Services Infrastructure

Web Services

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
Like 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 interpretations are created by the many attempts to realign existing technology and strategies with Web services. On the other hand, the emphasis on what could be done with Web services in the future often makes us lose track of what can be really done with Web services today and in the short term. These factors make it extremely difficult to get a coherent picture of what Web services are, what they contribute, and where they will be applied.

Alonso and his co-authors deliberately take a step back. Based on their academic and industrial experience with middleware and enterprise application integration systems, they describe the fundamental concepts behind the notion of Web services and present them as the natural evolution of conventional middleware, necessary to meet the challenges of the Web and of B2B application integration.

Rather than providing a reference guide or a “how to write your first Web service” kind of book, they discuss the main objectives of Web services, the challenges that must be faced to achieve them, and the opportunities that this novel technology provides. Established, as well as recently proposed, standards and techniques (e.g., WSDL, UDDI, SOAP, WS-Coordination, WS-Transactions, and BPEL), are then examined in the context of this discussion in order to emphasize their scope, benefits, and shortcomings. Thus, the book is ideally suited both for professionals considering the development of application integration solutions and for research and students interesting in understanding and contributing to the evolution of enterprise application technologies.

Web Services

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: Alonso, Application Integration Solutions, Application Technologies, BPEL, Contradictory Interpretations, Dangerous Combination, Enterprise Application Integration, First Web Service, Fundamental Concepts, Industrial Experience, Integration Systems, Middleware And Enterprise Application Integration, Natural Evolution, Noise Results, Novel Technology, Product Description, Reference Guide, services, Shortcomings, Technologies Web, Wishful Thinking

Data Processing Has Changed Over Time

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

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. Early on even IBM thought that there would only be a handful of companies that would need a computer.

In those days, computers were massive systems based on vacuum tubes and core memory. With the advent of the integrated circuit, computer architectures took a giant leap forward. The mainframe systems of the late 1980′s evolved into Client/Server applications of the early 1990′s. In parallel, the Internet grew from a few engineer and research systems to a World Wide network. It wasn’t until an Al Gore authored bill allowing commerce to be carried out over the Internet did things really start to change. Every business, every organization, had to carve out a space on “The Net.”

The ubiquitous nature of The Internet made it the perfect way for business to have a global reach while maintaining a local presence. Soon, application vendors were making Internet based applications. Today, solution providers are exploiting service oriented architectures and BPEL to provide more agile environments in which to do business.

Today, combining Internet access with massive, inexpensive compute power, data processing has been transformed from an ancillary function of accounting departments to mechanisms by which organizations can transform and enhance their internal processing while integrating their interactions with customers and suppliers.

The key to modern day data processing is not simply the automation of some manual process. Today, business realizes that data processing, information systems, change the very processes that are used to run the business. They not only do same things more efficiently, the do thins differently.

In the past an order was printed and sent to a supplier. The order was received and, if the item was in stock, it was shipped. Items not in stock were placed on back order. Today with Supply chain integration, the entire supply chain is integrated into one network. Warehouse management software notifies suppliers when stock levels drop and order are placed. The suppliers themselves use data mining and CRM (Customer Relationship Management) software to predict ordering patterns and anticipate customer needs.

Even how businesses interact with their customers has changed. In the past, businesses used mass marketing to appeal to the greatness number of possible customers. Today, we have mass customization where businesses on a group basis provide customized goods and services.

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Filed Under: BPEL News Tagged With: Al Gore, Application Vendors, BPEL, Business Today, Changed, Charles Babbage, Client Server Applications, Computer Architectures, Core Memory, Data, Data Processing, Giant Leap, Global Reach, Integrated Circuit, Mainframe Systems, Massive Systems, Over, Processing, Service Oriented Architectures, Solution Providers, Time, Time Data, Ubiquitous Nature, Vacuum Tubes, World War Ii
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