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Eating the IT Elephant: Moving from Greenfield Development to Brownfield
 
 
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Eating the IT Elephant: Moving from Greenfield Development to Brownfield [Paperback]

Richard Hopkins (Author), Kevin Jenkins (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 9, 2008 0137130120 978-0137130122 1

A Practical, Start-to-Finish Approach to Managing, Evolving, and Transforming Legacy IT Systems

 

For every IT executive, manager, architect, program leader, project leader, and lead analyst

 

“Richard and Kevin introduce us to a reality that’s often neglected in our industry: the problem of evolving legacy systems, a domain they call ‘Brownfield development.’ The authors identify the root of the problem as that of complexity, and offer an approach that focuses on the fundamentals of abstraction and efficient communication to nibble at this problem of transformation bit by bit. As the old saying goes, the way you eat the elephant is one bite at a time. Richard and Kevin bring us to the table with knife and fork and other tools, and show us a way to devour this elephant in the room.”

Grady Booch, IBM Fellow, co-creator of UML

 

“Most organizations in the 21st century have an existing, complex systems landscape. It is time that the IT industry face up to the reality of the situation and the need for new development methods and tools that address it. This book describes a new approach to the development of future systems: a structured approach that recognizes the challenges of ‘Brownfield’ development, is based on engineering principles, and is supported by appropriate tooling.”

Chris Winter, CEng CITP FBCS FIET, IBM Fellow, Member of the IBM Academy of Technology

 

Most conventional approaches to IT development assume that you’re building entirely new systems. Today, “Greenfield” development is a rarity. Nearly every project exists in the context of existing, complex system landscapes--often poorly documented and poorly understood. Now, two of IBM’s most experienced senior architects offer a new approach that is fully optimized for the unique realities of “Brownfield” development.

 

Richard Hopkins and Kevin Jenkins explain why accumulated business and IT complexity is the root cause of large-scale project failure and show how to overcome that complexity “one bite of the elephant at a time.” You’ll learn how to manage every phase of the Brownfield project, leveraging breakthrough collaboration, communication, and visualization tools--including Web 2.0, semantic software engineering, model-driven development and architecture, and even virtual worlds.

 

This book will help you reengineer new flexibility and agility into your IT environment…integrate more effectively with partners…prepare for emerging business challenges… improve system reuse and value…reduce project failure rates…meet any business or IT challenge that requires the evolution or transformation of legacy systems.

 

·   System complexity: understand it, and harness it

    Go beyond the comforting illusion of your high-level architecture diagrams

 

·   How conventional development techniques actually make things worse

    Why traditional decomposition and abstraction don’t work--and what to do instead

 

·   Reliably reengineer your IT in line with your business priorities

    New ways to understand, communicate, visualize, collaborate, and solve complex IT problems

 

·   Cut the elephant down to size, one step at a time

    Master all four phases of a Brownfield project: survey, engineer, accept, and deploy

 


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Richard Hopkins is an Executive IT Architect for IBM's services business. Over the past eleven years he has delivered a wide variety of systems, including a biometric-based national identity card system, a credit card account services system, and a customer management system for a national government. Tens of thousands of users and millions of customers use his systems every day.

 

In recent years he has grown frustrated with the ability of standard methods and tools to deal with the accumulated business and IT complexity he wrestles with every day. Rather than compromise with the standard "Greenfield" approaches, which ignore this complexity and pretend the world is one of "fluffy clouds," Richard opted instead for an engineering-based "Brownfield" approach that embraced the complexity. The patented and ground-breaking innovations he and his team made as a result are now being used worldwide on a variety of complex projects. These innovations are published for the first time in Eating the IT Elephant.

 

Richard is a Fellow of the Institution of Engineering and Technology (FIET). He also chaired the technical definition of the BioAPI standard from 1998-2000. BioAPI is the de-facto programming standard of the biometrics industry.

 

Kevin Jenkins is an Executive IT Architect for IBM's services business. Over the past seventeen years he has delivered numerous systems as diverse as air traffic control systems to e-commerce engagements. This variety of scale of systems, both in size and duration, allowed him to get a real-life view of the advantages and disadvantages of large- and small-scale developments and methods.

 

When he came together with Richard on an engagement to deliver a customer management system for a government agency, he had a chance to bring his experience with these different development methods to improve the success rate of this large project. In order to meet timescales, he utilized a model-driven solution to complete a large part of the delivered system, which offered a fast means to deliver the solution. This started Kevin thinking of extending this to the generation of the complete solution--and the idea of "Brownfield" was born. Over the following years he collaborated with Richard in developing the Brownfield.

 


Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: IBM Press; 1 edition (May 9, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0137130120
  • ISBN-13: 978-0137130122
  • Product Dimensions: 5.8 x 0.7 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,416,050 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful, Informational, but Yawn!, September 18, 2008
This review is from: Eating the IT Elephant: Moving from Greenfield Development to Brownfield (Paperback)
Required reading for my Information Engineering and Technology class. Everything you read and learn about in this book is applicable to virtually any project you begin. Though you get a lot of valuable infomation, I gave this book my r2r rating...rough to read, just like any technical manual.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Provides a complete approach to evolving and transforming Legacy IT Systems, August 17, 2008
This review is from: Eating the IT Elephant: Moving from Greenfield Development to Brownfield (Paperback)
EATING THE IT ELEPHANT: MOVING FROM GREENFIELD DEVELOPMENT TO BROWNFIELD provides a complete approach to evolving and transforming Legacy IT Systems, and will appeal to any advanced computer collection strong in IT management. The problems involved in legacy systems are clear: the authors here identify root problems, offer up approaches that feature balance and more efficient communication and transformation programs, and take a slower and more methodical approach to change than others. Highly recommended.

Diane C. Donovan

California Bookwatch
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
greenfield development, brownfield development, engineering phase, configuration artifacts, test artifacts, eating elephants, semantic technologies
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Elephant Eater, Big-Mouthed Superhero Required, The Trunk Road, Abstraction Works Only, Eating Elephants Is Difficult, Perfect World, The Confusion of Tongues, The Mythical Metaman, Second Life, The Mythical Man Month, Inventory Management, These Artifacts, Model Driven Architecture, Hello World, Better Way, Brownfield Beliefs, Unified Modeling Language, Occam's Razor, Fred Brooks, Brownfield Table, Computer Aided Software Engineering, Brownfield-generated Artifacts, New York, The View Editor, Bridging the Business
Browse Sample Pages:
Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Surprise Me!
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