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« Book Review - Plague Maker by Tim Downs | Main| Book Review - Birth Of An Age by James Beauseigneur »

Book Review - Java EE and .NET Interoperability

Category Book Reviews
As much as Microsoft might want you to be an all-.NET shop, the reality of the enterprise computing environment is that both .NET and Java will be used in some way, shape, or form.  If you're a developer or architect responsible for integrating platforms, this book could help you out...  Java EE and .NET Interoperability : Integration Strategies, Patterns, and Best Practices by Marina Fisher, Ray Lai, Sonu Sharma, and Laurence Moroney.

Contents:
Part 1 - Java EE .NET Interoperability: Java EE Platform Interoperability Essentials; .NET Platform Interoperability Essentials
Part 2- Synchronous Integration Solutions: Exploring Synchronous Integration; Web Services for Synchronous Integration; .NET Remoting for Synchronous Integration; Resource Tier Synchronous Integration
Part 3 - Asynchronous Integration Solutions: Exploring Asynchronous Integration; Asynchronous Web Services Integration; Messaging; Resource Tier Asynchronous Integration
Part 4 - Addressing Quality of Service Requirements: Addressing Quality of Services; Managing Distributed Transactions; Java EE .NET Security Interoperability; Java EE .NET Reliability, Availability, and Scalability; Managing Java EE .NET Interoperability Applications
Part 5 - Implementation: Migrating .NET Applications to Java
Index

The book is targeted towards developers as well as architects and managers responsible for these types of projects.  The focus and approach tends more towards the practical, "here's one way to do it" methodology.  There's no hesitation to suggest third-party frameworks and applications to help you accomplish something, as well as providing enough code to allow the reader to get a feel for how it all fits together.  It's not a comprehensive approach to every last thing you need to know, but if you're charged with platform integration, this will give you the practical foundation you'll need to start examining the options available to you.

Given the right needs and the right audience, it'll offer value to the reader...

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