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"This book performs a valuable service for managers seeking to harness the business potential of Web services technology. Bringing a real practitioner's experience to the task, Anne carefully walks managers through the fundamentals of Web services technology. She does a superb job of helping managers understand this technology so that they can move with sure footing and avoid potentially harmful stumbles along the way."
--From the Foreword by John Hagel III and John Seely Brown
Written for business and technology managers, Web Services: A Manager's Guide illuminates the potential of Web services for application integration. It describes the essentials of supporting technologies and shows how they can be built into a Web services infrastructure that is high-performance, robust, and cost-effective.
Realistic in approach, this book offers a readable definition of Web services and non-technical explanations of key technologies and standards. The author explores the scenarios and applications that would benefit most from Web services and offers guidelines for making an informed decision about which Web services products are right for your company's needs.
You will find detailed coverage of the following topics:
With this book in hand, you will have a clear understanding of Web services, what the technology can do for your organization, and the direction in which you should be heading. Margin content summaries enable time-constrained managers to locate and absorb needed information quickly. Case studies illustrate the benefits of adopting Web services and also reveal pitfalls to avoid.
Anne Thomas Manes, a leading authority on Web services technology, is a research director with the Burton Group, where she leads research on application platform strategies. In 2002, she was named by NetworkWorld as one of the 50 most powerful networking professionals and was also listed among the 2001 Power 100 IT Leaders by Enterprise Systems Journal. She served as chief technology officer at Systinet, the Web services infrastructure company, and as director of market innovation at Sun Microsystems. She is currently a member of the editorial board of Web Services Journal and a participant in Web services standards development efforts at JCP, W3C, OASIS, WS-I and UDDI.
0321185773AB04022003
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Managers AND programmers should consider this,
By
This review is from: Web Services: A Manager's Guide (Paperback)
The title is too restrictive! Ostensibly, the book is for managers and not engineers. There is not a stitch of source code in the book. The author does not assume that you know how to write code, but that you know how businesses use software. My impression is that the book is too useful to be restricted to managers. Programmers can also benefit, if they are about to embark on design and coding of a Web Service, and they have never done so before. Try starting here, as the first step in the design. Manes gives an excellent summary of the field, with what I consider realistic assessments of its prospects. Part of the book's appeal is the vendor independence. Yes, you can go to the websites of IBM, Microsoft, BEA Systems and others, and find the latest status of their WS offerings and white papers on their strategic takes. And you probably should do that. But getting an independent comparison of their efforts is futile from their own papers. I especially agree with her assertion that the dynamic assembly of software services is at least 10 years away. This is like in the 80s, when 4th and 5th Generation Languages were touted as just around the corner. When they arrived, you could instruct your computer in new tasks, without having to program! Well, that never happened. The complexity of business and research applications precluded it. Likewise with Web Services. Manes warns the reader not to be beguiled by such claims, but to focus on immediate do-ables.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Heavily biased,
By Al Limbaugh Franken (Baltimore, MD) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Web Services: A Manager's Guide (Paperback)
This book overpromotes certain vendor web services offerings. This is more than likely caused by the authors day job as an industry analyst where they get paid to write nice things about vendors who offer suboptimal solutions.I would encourage managers wanting to learn about web services to purchase a book targeted towards developers and only read the first several chapters. Developing Web Services and Java Web Services Architecture are two good books that fill this need.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Very superficial,
By Krishna Sudarshan (Millburn, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Web Services: A Manager's Guide (Paperback)
This seems to be written with the view that most managers are morons - when it comes to technical details. I needed much more than the superficial coverage that this book provides. And if you are, like I was, looking for a book that explains concepts without specific references to vendor implementation then this is not the book for you. I don't want to be in a position where I have to constantly worry about whether the author is not being biased about implementation quality - because, believe me, standards are implemented with wide latitude.
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