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8 Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good overview for architects,
By Jack D. Herrington "engineer and author" (Silicon Valley, CA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Designing Scalable .NET Applications (Expert's Voice) (Paperback)
The book sets some ambitious goals for itself, to teach anyone involved with the technical process what they need to know about .NET development. The book does indeed cover a wide range of .NET topics organized from the outside starting with coverage of complete application architecture including EAI with other systems, and them moving in towards the operating system, the web server, the development architecture and SQL. All of these topics are covered at a white paper level. In fact, the whole book reads and feels like one large white paper.So, on the up side it's a very good high level introduction to all of the concepts involved with .NET development of web applications. It's well written, although it could use some editing, and the concepts are explained well. One the down side, the book really does feel like an extended white paper. The topics aren't covered with enough depth to satisfy engineers so this book is probably best for architects and managers who want a high-level introduction to .NET. It's pretty buzzword heavy, for example in chapter four the coverage of workarounds around limitations in the operating system is called 'best practices'. Don't expect any coverage of systems other than Microsoft or comparisons to alternative systems. The interesting chapters: Chapter one covers EAI, content management systems and UML, which is an interesting place to start. The coverage is brief but well done. Chapter two covers the various windows services. This is a good introduction to the topic. Chapter three covers windows clustering and is one of the best chapters in the book, clean, concise and well written. Chapter five is the heart of the book. It's a super long chapter that covers everything about web application architecture in .NET including design patterns and coding standards. Both the design patterns and coding standards section could have been in appendices. I'm not sure the design patterns was worth covering at the depth that it was. Chapter six is about web services and it's a fine chapter that runs a bit long. Still, it's one of the best chapters in the book. Chapters seven, about IIS, and eight, about SQL, would have been better a little longer and more detailed. The SQL chapter could have mentioned some use of alternative database servers. Chapter nine, which covers and example application, probably should have been in the beginning with the rest of the book covering the example in greater depth.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very good overview of designing scalable .net enterprise app,
By Petter Pettersson (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Designing Scalable .NET Applications (Expert's Voice) (Paperback)
This is a very good overview on how to design scalable .net enterprise applications.The book covers most aspects concerned. We get coverage of how to choose the operating system for each layer in a scalable application. We further get input on how to choose the right cluster architecture, database and storage design, application design (including a thorough overview of web services design). The fact that Sten Sundblad has written the foreword witnesses the quality and importance of this book. The first 8 chapters are dedicated to theory. In the ninth (and last) chapter we also get to follow some use cases from UML modeling to finished code. In between we get info about how to set up the application environment and choosing storage design. Focus is always on scalability design, something many developers might need to spend more time on. For me at least, this has been very interesting and educational. Hopefully you will fell the same.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A good first book about scalable applications,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Designs (Expert's Voice in .NET) (Paperback)
This book covers all the process to make a scalable application in .net world. It explains all about software and hardware issues. It is written in a easy English and the examples are in VB.net (I had preferred in C#). It covers lots of things in .net: objects, Enterprise Library, COM+, SOA, SQL Server, IIS, Clustering and NLB, W2000 and W2003 server... At the beginning of the chapters it introduces a little theory about the content, and later it goes to develop in .net.
The language chosen for the examples and not going too deeply in some issues, like SOA, is just what i can say bad about it. And perhaps it shouldn't have been titled as 2.0. I miss that they haven't talk about some 2.0 features and develop in a 1.1 way. I should definitely recommend it.
4.0 out of 5 stars
An insider's book, although a useful one,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Designs (Expert's Voice in .NET) (Paperback)
Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Designs (PSNAD), by Rickard Redler and Joachim Rossberg, is an insider's book. It assumes that you already know almost everything you might want to know about Microsoft products. For example, page 37 namedrops "MSMQ" while page 451 tells you a little about it, if you didn't already know and you do persist that far.
Although PSNAD topics are mostly serious, the tone is chatty. A large number of sentences start with "Don Box says." Most of the readers who want to know what Don Box says will have bought one of his books; Amazon sells at least four of them. Chapter 1 of PSNAD is puffed out with an apparently obligatory introduction to diagramming, but the rest of the book mercifully downplays diagrams in favor of information. What this reader wanted to know was when to use Web services and when to use other techniques for distributed applications. Chapter 6 of PSNAD gives clear answers to this question in a page and a half, something no other current book provides. That alone was worth the price of admission.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good book to have.,
By Roy (Germany) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Designing Scalable .NET Applications (Expert's Voice) (Paperback)
A realize early that the book has potential. The content of the chapters are of high quality, even if I as a developer sometimes wanted more of the technical stuff (who doesn't ;-)?) But since the goal for the book is to focus on the whole picture and ties the hardware and the software design together in an easy understandable way I can highly recommend this book. I especially like the chapters about databases and the web service that described how to use the WSE kit from Microsoft in an easy manner. Thanks guys for the book!
2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good overview for architects,
By Roy (Germany) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Designs (Expert's Voice in .NET) (Paperback)
I found the book useful for my daily work. It shows me the different aspects to take into account when designing an enterprise application on .net.
Really good coverage on the server family and also on WSE -I give it 4 stars. I was able to download the source code which shows an idea of how to implement the different aspects of an EA. (Guess the previous reviewer's 404 was a one day problem? )
1 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fine book,
This review is from: Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Designs (Expert's Voice in .NET) (Paperback)
A 4 stars book. I give 5 because the 1st reader gave only 2 stars to bring it up to 4 stars :)
0 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Good book. But no sample project download as they declared...,
By Camel Review "heyday" (Los Angeles, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Designs (Expert's Voice in .NET) (Paperback)
The book is very good, it provides a big picture of all the aspects of Enterprise .NET application architecture design and development. At the end of this book, it says:" To download the complete test application, please visit www.apress.com", I realized that I might never be able to download the code. And when I went to apress.com, it just proved what I thought was not wrong: I just couldn't download the sample test project code at all: "404 Error. The requested page is not available."
I seriously doubt they have a sample project to download as they said. |
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Pro Scalable .NET 2.0 Application Designs (Expert's Voice in .NET) by Rickard Redler (Paperback - November 2, 2005)
$59.99
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