Fr. 48.90

Web 2.0 Architectures - What Entrepreneurs and Information Architects Need to Know

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Web 2.0 is more pervasive than ever, with business analysts and technologists struggling to comprehend the opportunity it represents. So what exactly is Web 2.0 -- a marketing term or technical reality? This fascinating book finally puts substance behind the phenomenon by identifying the core patterns of Web 2.0, and by introducing an abstract model and reference architecture to help you take advantage of them.

In Web 2.0 Architectures, authors Duane Nickull, Dion Hinchcliffe, and James Governor -- who have 40 years of combined experience with technical specifications and industry trends -- examine what makes successful Web 2.0 services such as Google AdSense, Flickr, BitTorrent, MySpace, Facebook, and Wikipedia work. The result is a base of knowledge that developers, business people, futurists, and entrepreneurs can understand and use as a source of ideas and inspiration.

This book reveals:

A Web 2.0 model: How the classic Client-Server model evolved into a more detailed Web 2.0 model.

Web 2.0 reference architecture: A generic component view of basic Web 2.0 patterns that can be repurposed for other commercial ventures.

Specific Web 2.0 patterns: How service oriented architecture (SOA), Software as a Service (SaaS), participation-collaboration, mashups, rich user experience, collaborative tagging systems (Folksonomy), and more can be used in your business.

If you want to understand what makes Web 2.0 tick, and how it will enhance your business, Web 2.0 Architectures takes you right to the core.

List of contents

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1 An Architect s View of the Web
Looking for Web 2.0
Capturing Web 2.0 Knowledge with Patterns and
Architecture
Chapter 2 A Different View of the Internet
Best Practices for Forensic Architecture
Internet Aspects
Chapter 3 Dissecting Web 2.0 Examples
DoubleClick and Google AdSense
Ofoto and Flickr
Akamai and BitTorrent
MP3.com and Napster
Britannica Online and Wikipedia
Personal Websites and Blogs
Screen Scraping and Web Services
Content Management Systems and Wikis
Directories (Taxonomy) and Tagging (Folksonomy)
More Hints for Defining Web 2.0
Chapter 4 Modeling Web 2.0
A New Client/Server Model for Web 2.0
Time Magazine s Person of the Year: You (and Web 2.0)
Chapter 5 A Reference Architecture for
Developers
About Reference Architectures
The Web 2.0 Reference Architecture
Architectural Models That Span Tiers
Consistent Object and Event Models
Chapter 6 From Models to Patterns
A Metamodel for Architectural Patterns
The Pattern Presentation Template
Chapter 7 Specific Patterns of Web 2.0
The Service-Oriented Architecture Pattern
The Software as a Service (SaaS) Pattern
The Participation-Collaboration Pattern
The Asynchronous Particle Update Pattern The Mashup Pattern
The Rich User Experience Pattern
The Synchronized Web Pattern
The Collaborative Tagging Pattern
The Declarative Living and Tag Gardening Pattern
The Semantic Web Grounding Pattern
The Persistent Rights Management (PRM) Pattern
The Structured Information Pattern
Summary
Chapter 8 Where Are We Going from Here?
Web 2.0 Offshoots
A Timeless Way to Build Software 2.0
The Timeless Way of Building Software: Inspiration for the Next
Generation of Web Software
Creating Open Services That Last (and That Anyone Can
Use)
Web 2.0 into the Uncertain Future
Colophon

About the author










James Governor is Principal Analyst and founder of RedMonk (http://www.redmonk.com/jgovernor/). He leads coverage in the enterprise applications space, assisting clients with application development, integration middleware and systems management issues, as they relate to operational and business process optimization.

Before RedMonk he spent three years at Illuminata, Inc., where he led both the Application Strategies and Enterprise Management practices at the firm. He worked with both vendor clients, to establish product development and marketing strategies, and as an advisor on IT strategy to user organizations and service providers. James managed other analysts at the firm to ensure timely delivery of reports and custom research projects.

He joined Illuminata from InformationWeek UK, where he was deputy managing editor.

Before InformationWeek he worked at Computing, the UK's leading enterprise title. As a reporter he specialized in systems management, application middleware, and legacy operating environments, working closely with IT managers and vendors to identify and break exclusive news stories.

James has been an IBM and Microsoft corporate watcher for 8 years. He's regularly quoted in US and European press, and has served as an industry expert for television and radio segments with media outlets like the BBC.
Dion Hinchcliffe is founder and chief technology officer for the Enterprise Web 2.0 advisory and consulting firm Hinchcliffe & Company, based in Alexandria, Virginia. A veteran of software development, Dion has been working for two decades with leading-edge methods to accelerate project schedules and raise the bar for software quality. He has extensive practical experience with enterprise technologies and he consults, speaks, and writes prolifically on IT and software architecture. Dion still works in the trenches with enterprise IT clients in the federal government and Fortune 1000. He also speaks and publishes about Web 2.0 and SOA on a regular basis. Dion is working on a book about Web 2.0 for Addison-Wesley and is currently editor-in-chief of the Web 2.0 Journal and AjaxWorld Magazine.
Duane Nikull works as a senior technical evangelist for Adobe Systems, Inc. The main focus of his professional career (http://www.nickull.net) has been to work for both the United Nations CEFACT committee and OASIS for the purposes of writing and building new architectures for global integration of multiple systems.Since 1996, he has worked on multiple enterprise architectures including many service oriented architectures (SOA) within various standards bodies including W3C, UN/CEFACT, OASIS and others. He has also contributed to many SOA papers and articles on service oriented architecture. His focus has shifted towards many web service standards in recent years.

He has worked on many other interesting technologies including the first contextual XML Search Engine, an Alternative fuel hydrogen project and the new UN/CEFACT eBusiness Architecture and related technologies.


Summary

Identifies the core patterns of Web 2.0, and introduces an abstract model and reference architecture to help you take advantage of them. This book examines what makes successful Web 2.0 services such as Google AdSense, Flickr, BitTorrent, MySpace, Facebook, and Wikipedia tick.

Product details

Authors James Governor, Governor James, Dion Hinchcliffe, Duane Nickull
Assisted by Robert Romano (Illustration)
Publisher O'Reilly Media
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 21.09.2009
 
EAN 9780596514433
ISBN 978-0-596-51443-3
No. of pages 256
Weight 444 g
Series OREILLY
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > IT, data processing > IT

Internet Guides & Online Services, Internet guides and online services, COMPUTERS / Internet / Web Services & APIs

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