The book begins with Microsoft's Distributed Internet Architecture (DNA) and DNA's notion of a three-tier model for separating business objects for better scalability. Of course, COM is an important part of DNA, and the author's introduction to COM is as good as any. Coverage of database acronyms such as ODBC (Open Database Connectivity), ADO (ActiveX Data Objects), and OLE-DB (Object Linking and Embedding Database) round out the basics. Then the author proceeds to explain the capabilities of MTS, from using it as an object request broker (ORB) for locating remote services, to the fundamentals of transaction processing.
At this point, theory becomes practice, and the author walks the reader through a complete sample MTS-based application, an automated accounting package for the "Classifieds" section of a small newspaper. The author shows how to use Microsoft Visual Database Tools and provides a taste of Microsoft's software methodology called Microsoft Solutions Framework (MSF). After you learn how to model objects for the database and business object layers, the book helps you build them using Visual Basic and Visual C++. Finally, you learn the presentation layer, which is built using Active Server Pages (ASPs) for running inside a browser.
Final chapters offer material on additional Microsoft tools, such as the COM-to-mainframe tool (called COMTI) and Microsoft Message Queue Server (MSMQ). There's also a preview of COM+--still under construction and due out with Windows 2000. In all, Designing Component-Based Applications successfully covers the state of the art in component development for the enterprise using the complete range of available Microsoft tools and technologies. --Richard Dragan
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent book about Microsoft COM and MTS,
By Marc Linster (MLinster@IBAConsulting.com) (Concord, MA (US)) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Designing Component-Based Applications (Paperback)
An excellent book about Microsoft COM and Microsoft Transaction Server. A real 'Must Read' for anybody who wants to develop multi-tiered apps on the COM/MTS platform. The book explains on 400 pages how COM works (the roles of the interfaces are described with just enough detail to understand the functioning of the Transaction Server), how theMicrosoft Transaction Server manages objects, transactions and database resources, how to use COMTI to connect to SNA, CICS, CICS Link, LU 6.2, IBM Message Queue and IMS, how to connect to XA Transaction Providers etc. The book is a sound mix between background information and hands-on examples. The examples use both VC++ and VB ++. The book leads through the systematic design of data objects, business objects and the different ways to connect to the presentation layer (ASP, RDS w. disconnected recordsets from the client, using the 'OBJECT' tag in IE 4, remote invocation of application layer objects from the browser). The differences between 'simple COM' objects and COM objects that are 'MTS aware' is explained in detail (its fairly simple, but essential to take advantage of the resource and transaction management framework). The book also discusses component packaging, deployment, security and performance considerations. The book takes the 3-2-1 view (3 tier application, developed by 2 people in 1 months). For those that have struggled (or tried to) through technical descriptions of COM, this will be very rewarding reading because Mary Kirtland never forgets about the bigger picture when describing technology details. Finally, the book gives a preview on COM+ (integral part of Windows 2000) and highlights what the major differences between COM and COM+ will be. Its the best explanation of how to build for Microsoft DNA that I have read so far.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good reference for 70-100 review,
By A Customer
This review is from: Designing Component-Based Applications (Paperback)
This book does a good job of explaining the COM standard from the ground up. The first third is devoted to COM. The rest of the book is an overview of building an enterprise application from the ground up using Microsoft technologies.I used this book as my primary reference in preparing for the new Analyzing Requirements exam (70-100) in the new MCSD track based on the recommendation of someone I know that passed the beta. It may not be listed as a study guide for the test, but it is far better than the Syngress or Sybex study guide for that test. (They were both fairly useless.)
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is THE book,
By A Customer
This review is from: Designing Component-Based Applications (Paperback)
Everyone always draws the same n-tier diagram and says they are going to build a scalable, MAINTANABLE solution. This book actually provides a blueprint, not the 30,000 ft view. At my job, we call it "The Good Book"
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