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bulk hail




The attendee roster sported the usual industry heavyweights, i.
Let's have a closer look at why that is so.
As it turns out naming this additional element can have a more profound influence on the system design than might appear at first.
After a lot of deja-vu in Windows GDI programming I created a toolkit that contains each pattern as a small executable.
, Microsoft, IBM, SAP, making me proud to add Google to the list. While Java is not necessarily the greatest language to "host" a DSL we can go a lot further than developers generally believe or care for.
After "loosely coupled", "stateless" must be a close runner-up as the ultimate nirvana in buzzword-compliant architectures. This means we got to interact with the product team and play with some pre-beta bits.
If those buzzwords had been around at the time I would have been pretty cool, too.
If those buzzwords had been around at the time I would have been pretty cool, too.
Naturally, a lot of details are under NDA and are likely to evolve before the beta release. For one thing, a fair number of my intellectual drinking buddies tend to congregate around the large software company in the Pacific Northwest. Dependency Injection avoids these dependencies and therefore improves testability.
If you disagree you are welcome to argue with me, but you are buying!
It was interesting to see what academia are working on these days in the areas of middleware and SOA.
Let's have a closer look at why that is so.
The key is to be passionate about your products, offer useful information and insights to your commmunity. So yes, I am still promiscuous when it comes to platforms.
I am speaking at the Patterns and Practices Summit and SD West this week. So yes, I am still promiscuous when it comes to platforms.
Besides a guaranteed top score in buzzword bingo the workshop provided a unique opportunity to connect thought leaders from academia and industry over the course of a week.
If you disagree you are welcome to argue with me, but you are buying! Today, I 'd like to share my view on state and lessness. We don't have to go further than the local coffee shop.
How complex does my screen navigation have to be in order to justify a Front Controller as opposed to a Page Controller? I took that feedback to heart and set out to develop a toolkit that demonstrates the routing and transformation patterns in our book.
It was interesting to see what academia are working on these days in the areas of middleware and SOA. As it turns out naming this additional element can have a more profound influence on the system design than might appear at first.
While Java is not necessarily the greatest language to "host" a DSL we can go a lot further than developers generally believe or care for.
This one is setup by Keith Pleas in close collaboration with the Patterns and Practices group at Microsoft.
This time, though, Ken Arnold stole a little bit of my show by publishing an excellent article in ACM Queue magazine called "Programmers are People, too".
At the same time, anyone who has seen my book must believe me when I say that I am a very visual person.
While the conference logistics can be quirky at times the content is top notch.
So are these standards useful at all for Web Services development today?
If those buzzwords had been around at the time I would have been pretty cool, too. Or, they believe distributed solutions cannot be successful unless they include a distributed transaction model.
Now that I work for Google I was able to go to Microsoft's Professional Developer Conference aka PDC for the first time. While the conference logistics can be quirky at times the content is top notch. Invariably, the answer is "it depends".
It was interesting to see what academia are working on these days in the areas of middleware and SOA.