Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Sustainable IT Architecture Pierre Bonnet

Sustainable IT Architecture By Pierre Bonnet

Sustainable IT Architecture by Pierre Bonnet


$35.36
Condition - Very Good
Only 1 left

Summary

This book focuses on Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), the basis of sustainable and more agile IT systems that are able to adapt themselves to new trends and manage processes involving a third party.

Faster Shipping

Get this product faster from our US warehouse

Sustainable IT Architecture Summary

Sustainable IT Architecture: The Progressive Way of Overhauling Information Systems with SOA by Pierre Bonnet

This book focuses on Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), the basis of sustainable and more agile IT systems that are able to adapt themselves to new trends and manage processes involving a third party. The discussion is based on the public Praxeme method and features a number of examples taken from large SOA projects which were used to rewrite the information systems of an insurance company; as such, decision-makers, creators of IT systems, programmers and computer scientists, as well as those who will use these new developments, will find this a useful resource.

About Pierre Bonnet

Pierre Bonnet, Orchestra Networks, France Jean-Michel Detavernier, SMABTP Dominique Vauquier, Praxeme, France

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements. Foreword . Preface. Guide for the Reader. Introduction to the SOA Project at SMABTP . Chapter 1. Initial Perspectives. 1.1. 50 years of computing - an overview. 1.2. What remains today? Part I. Why a Sustainable Information System? Chapter 2. Company-oriented Services. 2.1. Consequences of the Internet revolution. 2.2. What do the leading market players say? 2.3. What do the chief information officers think? 2.4. The issues faced at general management level. 2.5. Levels of maturity. Chapter 3. SOA Maturity Levels. 3.1. Towards the creation of a more agile information system. 3.2. Cosmetic SOA. 3.3. Extended SOA. 3.4. Overhaul SOA. 3.5. The matrices of SOA maturity. Chapter 4. Economic and Social Aspects. 4.1. Removal of obstacles that may slow down the progressive overhaul of an information system. 4.2. The future of IT specialists. 4.3. Off-shoring. 4.4. The generation mix. 4.5. The role of software infrastructure editors. Part II. The Principles of SOA. Chapter 5. The Properties of SOA. 5.1. The definition of service for users. 5.2. The definition of service for IT specialists. 5.3. The properties of basic SOA. 5.4. The properties of agility. Chapter 6. Orchestration (BPM and SOA). 6.1. Multiple requirements in orchestration. 6.2. The levels of orchestration. 6.3. The techniques of orchestration. 6.4. Towards the homogenization of orchestration. 6.5. The benefits of orchestration. 6 Part III. The Need for an Enterprise Method. Chapter 7. The Discovery of Services (Reference Framework and Urbanization). 7.1. New needs for the information system. 7.2. Why are different methods seldom used within companies? 7.3. Reference frameworks. 7.4. Essential tools. Chapter 8. The Praxeme Enterprise Method. 8.1. Praxeme: the initiative behind a public method. 8.2. The Praxeme method. 8.3. Enterprise system topology according to the Praxeme method. 8.4. What the Praxeme method means for SOA. 8.5. Advantages of the Praxeme method. Chapter 9. Modeling with Praxeme. 9.1. The modeling of requirements. 9.2. Semantic modeling. 9.3. Pragmatic modeling. 9.4. Pre-modeling. 9.5. Logical modeling. 9.6. Logical modeling of batch computing. 9.7. Technical modeling. 9.8. Software modeling. 9.9. Benefits of the methodology. Part IV. Mastering Existing Techniques. Chapter 10. Tools for Industrializing the Method. 10.1. Requirements in the industrialization of procedures. 10.2. Frameworks and design patterns. 10.3. Tools for increased agility. 10.4. Representation tools. 10.5. Tools for tests and management. 10.5.1. Non-regression tests. 10.6. Tools for the management of different versions and the configuration of programs. 10.7. Benefits of using tools in the method. Chapter 11. Systems Integration and Common Information Language. 11.1. New requirements in communication. 11.2. ESB's functions. 11.3. Integrating ESB into SI. 11.4. ESB's benefits. Chapter 12. SOA Platform. 12.1. Requirements for the global vision of technical architecture. 12.2. New technical components. 12.3. Managing performance. 12.4. Managing exploitation. 12.5. Managing maintenance. 12.6. Benefits of SOA platforms. Chapter 13. Rules Management at the Scale of the Whole Enterprise ( Jerome B OYER , ILOG Software ). 13.1. Overview. 13.2. Deep view. 13.3. When to use a rule engine. 13.4. Logical architecture view. 13.5. BRMS and SOA. Chapter 14. Semantic Integration ( Erik S TEINHOLTZ , Progress Software ). 14.1. Enabling the adaptive enterprise. 14.2. Inhibitors for change. 14.3. Definition of semantic integration. 14.4. Parallel track information modeling. 14.5. Change inhibitors addressed with semantic integration. 14.6. Putting it to work. Conclusion . Weblinks. Bibliography. Special Technical Note. Index.

Additional information

CIN1848210892VG
9781848210899
1848210892
Sustainable IT Architecture: The Progressive Way of Overhauling Information Systems with SOA by Pierre Bonnet
Used - Very Good
Hardback
ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
2009-04-17
384
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Sustainable IT Architecture