Cloud Application Architectures, 1st Edition
by George Reese
Web Service Contract Design and Versioning for SOA
by Thomas Erl; Anish Karmarkar; Priscilla Walmsley; Hugo Haas; L. Umit Yalcinalp; Canyang Kevin Liu; David Orchard; Andre Tost; James Pasley
SOA Design Patterns
by Thomas Erl
Google SketchUp Cookbook, 1st Edition
by Bonnie Roskes
Head First Software Development
by Dan Pilone; Russell Miles
The goal of this book is to present and compare various options one for systems architecture from two separate points of view. One, that of the information technology decision-maker who must choose a solution matching company business requirements, and secondly that of the systems architect who finds himself between the rock of changes in hardware and software technologies and the hard place of changing business needs.
Different aspects of server architecture are presented, from databases designed for parallel architectures to high-availability systems, and touching en route on often- neglected performance aspects.
1. The book provides IT managers, decision makers and project
leaders who want to acquire knowledge sufficient to understand the
choices made in and capabilities of systems offered by various
vendors:
2. Provides system design information to balance the characteristic
applications against the capabilities and nature of various
architectural choices
3. In addition, it offers an integrated view of the concepts in
server architecture, accompanied by discussion of effects on the
evolution of the data processing industry.
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still many choices - 2005-04-24
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Chevance gives good coverage to both the hardware and software issues. In the field of multiple/concurrent processing, there is still a variety of hardware offerings. You get a discussion of trends. Most importantly of whether the Intel or AMD chipsets might predominate over more specialised chipsets for future architectures. The economics of mass produced cpus suggests that you may want to hedge your bets as to what you commit to.
Further up the food chain, the book goes into various software approaches, especially with an eye towards being deployed on Web servers. Unlike some specialised multiprocessors, which might be mainly used in science, the Web servers have broad appeal. Here, Enterprise Java Beans, object pooling and other subjects are gone into. However, while this section of the book may have broader appeal, it is more comprehensively covered in other texts.
Top Level Categories:
Programming
Software Engineering
Sub-Categories:
Programming > Parallel or Concurrent Programming
Software Engineering > Architecture
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