J2EE Technology in Practice: Building Business Applications with the Java 2 Platform (Addison-Wesley Java Series)

J2EE Technology in Practice: Building Business Applications with the Java 2 Platform (Addison-Wesley Java Series)

by Rick Cattell, Jim Inscore
     
 
Since its introduction, The Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) has achieved remarkable success among application server providers and their customers. More than a dozen leading application server companies have announced J2EE compatible products, and over one million developers have downloaded the J2EE SDK from Sun's J2EE Web site (http://java.sun.com/j2ee

Overview

Since its introduction, The Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) has achieved remarkable success among application server providers and their customers. More than a dozen leading application server companies have announced J2EE compatible products, and over one million developers have downloaded the J2EE SDK from Sun's J2EE Web site (http://java.sun.com/j2ee).

Today, numerous enterprises face the challenge of developing distributed applications. IT professionals deal with a variety of issues: connecting dispersed users with centralized applications, building applications quickly and efficiently, and connecting heterogeneous clients and servers.

J2EE in Practice provides ten examples of ways that J2EE technology has helped leading corporations, educational institutions, and government organizations face these challenges and reap significant rewards. Chapters in this book explore how:

  • JCrew enhanced its traditional catalog sales operation using J2EE technology from Art Technology Group (ATG).

  • One of the country's largest mortgage companies, HomeSide Lending, produced innovative online lending services using the BEA WebLogic server.

  • The Borland Application Server enabled AT&T Unisource to respond quickly to demand in long-distance voice traffic routing.

  • Codexa Corporation used Brokat's GemStone/J platform to deliver information for widely dispersed financial services professionals.

  • eTapestry.com delivers applications to assist nonprofits in their fundraising using GemStone/J and Sun Microsystem's Forte for Java development environment.

  • Altura International used the HP BlueStone J2EE platform to implement the Web's first online catalog shopping portal, catalogcity.com.

  • IBM customers Honeywell and Bekins use Java technology to improve processes on the manufacturing floor and in the warehousing and delivery of large consumer products.

  • International Data Post (IDP), a service owned by seven European postal operators, brought snail mail to the Internet age using iPlanet's J2EE technology.

  • Physics research institute CERN worked with Oracle to provide electronic document handling services to over 5000 users worldwide.

  • J2EE technology helps the US Military Traffic Management Command, Freight Systems Office (FSO) manage and control costs of small package shipping.

Editorial Reviews

Booknews
Presents case studies which show how the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition has helped ten companies or organizations develop distributed applications and deal with such issues as connecting dispersed users with centralized applications, building applications quickly and efficiently, and connecting heterogeneous clients and servers. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Product Details

ISBN-13:
9780201746228
Publisher:
Pearson Education
Publication date:
06/04/2001
Series:
Addison-Wesley Java Series
Edition description:
Enterprise Edition
Pages:
336
Product dimensions:
7.37(w) x 9.24(h) x 0.66(d)

Meet the Author

Dr. R. G. G. "Rick" Cattell is a distinguished engineer in Java platform software at Sun Microsystems, and a founding member of the Java Platform Group that produced J2EE. He has worked for 17 years at Sun Microsystems in senior roles, and for 10 years before that in research at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) and Carnegie-Mellon University. The author of more than 50 technical papers and five books, Cattell has worked with object technology and database systems since 1980. He is co-creator of JDBC, and was responsible for forming Sun's Database Engineering Group, whose performance tuning helped to make Sun a leading database server provider. He led the Cypress database management system effort at Xerox PARC, was a founder of SQL Access, and was founder and chair of the Object Database Management Group (ODMG). He authored the world's first monograph on object data management, and has received the Association for Computing Machinery Outstanding Dissertation Award.

Jim Inscore manages technical publications for the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition, in the Java Platform Software Group of Sun Microsystems. His roles include overseeing developer documentation, such as the J2EE Tutorial and J2EE Blueprints, providing developer content for the java.sun.com/j2ee Web site, and serving as technical editor on the Java Series, Enterprise Edition, from Addison-Wesley.

Inscore has been involved with object-oriented and enterprise-related technologies for more than 15 years, working with developer documentation for organizations that include Oracle, Ingres, NeXT, Kaleida, and Macromedia. Prior to that, he spent 10 years writing marketing communications materials for the technical marketplace.

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