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IT Architectures and Middleware: Strategies for Building Large, Integrated Systems

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Title: IT Architectures and Middleware: Strategies for Building Large, Integrated Systems
by Chris Britton
ISBN: 0-201-70907-4
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Pub Co
Pub. Date: 15 December, 2000
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $39.99
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Average Customer Rating: 4 (12 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: Overview that clearly defines middleware
Comment: The value of this book can be distilled into a succinct sentence: it describes middleware and how it's used as an architectural foundation, and provides guidance for when to use transaction-oriented and message-oriented solutions. While this sounds simplistic, consider how architects go about designing systems. They think in terms of their background and experience. An architect who comes from a data-intensive environment is apt to use a transaction monitor as a component of a solution instead of a message queuing manager that may be more appropriate. This book provides architects with a high-level view of middleware and how to select the most appropiate solution for a given design problem.

What I especially like about the book is the clear writing and well designed illustrations that combine to convey basic concepts and subtle nuances of transaction- and message-oriented middleware. If you are seeking low-level details necessary for the detailed design or build phases of a project this book will disappoint. However, if you are seeking clear and unbiased information on the strengths and weaknesses of various middleware solutions and how they serve as the foundation of distributed systems this book will almost certainly give you insights and knowledge that you can immediately put to use.

This book is a perfect complement to B2B Application Integration by David S. Linthicum, which goes into additional technical detail and covers broader issues of architecture with respect to heterogenous [legacy] system integration. Regardless of your technical environment, however, IT Architectures and Middleware is worthwhile for new and seasoned architects and IT managers.

Rating: 5
Summary: Excellent overview
Comment: Working in my little niche of IT (database administration), I found it hard to see the larger picture of how IT fits into the business as a whole, and how to put our own IT setup into context.

I found this book extremely useful in describing the various parts of an enterprise IT architecture and some of the trades and balances involved in any technical solution. I particularly liked the fact that the author appeared to be writing "from the coal-face", as it were, as opposed to presenting an academic treatise.

My only caveat would be that the discussion covers a lot of complex areas and, while there are isolated real-life scenarios where appropriate, I would have liked more extended real-life case studies. I appreciate though that the author didn't want to chop down a rainforest to produce the book.

Overall I would certainly recommend this book to anyone who works in IT, and would even argue it would make enlightening reading for non-IT managers (although the technical stuff might well scare them off!). My congratulations to the author.

Mark

Rating: 5
Summary: An out and out excellent book
Comment: Rarely these days do you come across a technical book that gets to the bottom of the issues in a non-marketing manner and without using excessive technical jargon.

At the bottom of it all, the complexities of building large applications are based on some practical issues as well as some theoretical computing issues. How these architectural issues can be addressed in a product independent manner is at the heart of this book.

It was a pleasure to read again a non-verbose book showing the clarity of thought, and I strongly recommend it to any one interested in architectural issues of building large systems.

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