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Title: Client/Server Programming with Java and CORBA, 2nd Edition by Robert Orfali, Dan Harkey ISBN: 047124578X Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Pub. Date: 10 March, 1998 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $59.99 |
Average Customer Rating: 3.65
Rating: 5
Summary: An excellent tutorial and reference
Comment: This is an excellent book for learning and applying CORBA from a Java environment. It is loaded with examples and is pretty well indexed. I have been able to find just about everything I wanted related to CORBA programming. It's focus is programming. In addition, it does an excellent job of comparing and contrasting alternative technologies (e.g., DCOM, HTTP/CGI, RMI, Sockets/RPC) and implementations (e.g., JavaIDL, VisiBroker, some Orbix, Applets). It has nice tables of capabilities and performance metrics to summarize the various comparison sections. It does not cover any details of the underlying protocol, etc. The last half of this 1000-page book is devoted to three-tier implementations, Java Beans, CORBA beans, and Enterprise Java Beans -- excellent coverage of an important topic, but better split into a second book if only to help make the index less cluttered.
Rating: 5
Summary: A truly great CORBA book
Comment: I found this book to be a very helpful tutorial-style book on CORBA for beginners. Although some may argue about the wide scope of this staggeringly huge and complete volume, I thought that the chapters are justified and very helpful. For example, the book includes in-depth chapters on how CORBA compares to servlets, CGI, sockets, RMI, and DCOM. The chapters are very thorough and the same program is rewritten for each technology to allow you a clear perspective upon which to compare. In addition, the chapters on JavaBeans and JDBC are also top notch, written in a very personable tone that makes it enjoyable to read.
I have gotten a great deal of valuable CORBA knowlege from this book and I would highly recommend it to any intermediate Java programmer who is looking to learn CORBA and willing to put some serious time into doing it.
Rating: 4
Summary: I give 5 stars for the conceptual discussion parts
Comment: When you look at the table of contents, you can discover the book is not just about how Java and Corba work together. Or let me put it this way, that's not the only theme you can get from this insightful book. My take-away after reading all the parts where it discusses the history and difference between Corba and other distributed object technology is a satisfatorily complete overview of all these middleware/messaging technology, which are all important contributors to today's red hot J2EE-compliant application server market (BEA WebLogic, IBM Websphere), or what EJB likes to be known as: ORB with TP monitor capability.
Granted, the book is a little outdated (written in early 1998 apparently), and this is about the only drawback of the book. Hope the authors will come up with a new edition with all the latest development in this topic soon. And mind you again, I skipped all the implementation parts of the book (which is the only reason I gave it 4 stars instead of 5 stars - because I don't wanna be potentially overrating a part that I didn't read). I focussed on the high level discussion on CORBA concepts (which explains it better than other books I've read on this subject), how Sun started to endorse it with Java, as well as comparing technologies (comparable not in the technolgy purist's sense, but in the sense that they are 'enablers' for IT folks who wanna implement remote object invocation over enterprise LAN or over internet) such as traditional sockets, CGI, RMI, Servlet, and the major CORBA rival - DCOM. If you've used these various technologies before separately like I did, and sometimes felt a bit overwhelmed by all the different standard and practices, this book provides an EXCELLENT melting point where suddenly why there're all such various levels of technology, and the relative pros and cons of each of them all makes sense.
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Title: Instant CORBA by Robert Orfali, Dan Harkey, Jeri Edwards ISBN: 0471183334 Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Pub. Date: 1997 List Price(USD): $34.99 |
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Title: Client/Server Survival Guide, 3rd Edition by Robert Orfali, Dan Harkey, Jeri Edwards ISBN: 0471316156 Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Pub. Date: 25 January, 1999 List Price(USD): $49.99 |
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Title: Pure Corba by Fintan Bolton ISBN: 0672318121 Publisher: Sams Pub. Date: 16 July, 2001 List Price(USD): $49.99 |
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Title: Programming With Visibroker : A Developer's Guide to Visibroker for Java by Vijaykumar Natarajan, Stefan Reich, Bhaskar Vasudevan ISBN: 0471376825 Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Pub. Date: 03 October, 2000 List Price(USD): $49.99 |
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Title: Teach Yourself Corba in 14 Days (Teach Yourself...) by Jeremy L. Rosenberger ISBN: 0672312085 Publisher: Sams Publishing Pub. Date: 01 January, 1998 List Price(USD): $30.00 |
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