Trends in Enterprise Application Architecture [electronic resource] : VLDB Workshop, TEAA 2005, Trondheim, Norway, August 28, 2005, Revised Selected Papers / edited by Dirk Draheim, Gerald Weber.

Por: Draheim, Dirk [editor.]Colaborador(es): Weber, Gerald [editor.]Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3888Editor: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006Descripción: X, 150 p. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9783540327356Trabajos contenidos: SpringerLink (Online service)Tema(s): Computer science | Computer Communication Networks | Database management | Information storage and retrieval systems | Information systems | Computer Science | Database Management | Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet) | Computer Communication Networks | Information Storage and Retrieval | e-Commerce/e-business | Computers and SocietyFormatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 005.74 Clasificación LoC:QA76.9.D3Recursos en línea: de clik aquí para ver el libro electrónico
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Springer eBooksResumen: TEAA 2005 (Trends in Enterprise Application Architecture) took place as a workshop of the conference VLDB 2005 (31st International Conference on Very Large Databases) in August 2005 in Trondheim, Norway. Enterprise applicationsare mission criticalfor organizations.Currently there are several initiatives that see enterprise application integration as their natural playground, like Model Driven Architecture and Service Oriented Architecture. Now is the time to investigate how these approaches can provide added value. At TEAA 2005 the contributions identi?ed a problem or issue in enterprise application architecture and proposed and evaluated a solution. The workshop bene?ted from lively discussions among the participants. Applications, operating systems, database systems, hardware architecture and system administration concepts must be orchestrated to yield an optimized systemarchitecturethat tacklesperformance,stability,security,maintainability, andtotalcostofownership.Inpractice,itisalwaysaholisticviewthatisneeded it is known that system design approaches that overemphasize one of the software or hardware architecture aspects are likely to fail. In the TEAA 2005 workshop we examined the conceptual underpinnings of enterprise application architecture. We are grateful to our keynote speaker Laura Haas for sharing her insights with us.
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Building an Information Infrastructure for Enterprise Applications -- Evaluating Integration Architectures A Scenario-Based Evaluation of Integration Technologies -- Integrating a Software Product Line with Rule-Based Business Process Modeling -- A Middleware Architecture for Supporting Adaptable Replication of Enterprise Application Data -- MDA and Analysis of Web Applications -- A Message Exchange Architecture for Modern E-Commerce -- Architecture for Distributed ERP Systems -- Influence of Balancing Used in a Distributed Data Warehouse on the Extraction Process -- OLAP Schemata for Correct Applications -- Towards a Secure Data Stream Management System -- An Efficient Zoning Technique for Multi-dimensional Access Methods.

TEAA 2005 (Trends in Enterprise Application Architecture) took place as a workshop of the conference VLDB 2005 (31st International Conference on Very Large Databases) in August 2005 in Trondheim, Norway. Enterprise applicationsare mission criticalfor organizations.Currently there are several initiatives that see enterprise application integration as their natural playground, like Model Driven Architecture and Service Oriented Architecture. Now is the time to investigate how these approaches can provide added value. At TEAA 2005 the contributions identi?ed a problem or issue in enterprise application architecture and proposed and evaluated a solution. The workshop bene?ted from lively discussions among the participants. Applications, operating systems, database systems, hardware architecture and system administration concepts must be orchestrated to yield an optimized systemarchitecturethat tacklesperformance,stability,security,maintainability, andtotalcostofownership.Inpractice,itisalwaysaholisticviewthatisneeded it is known that system design approaches that overemphasize one of the software or hardware architecture aspects are likely to fail. In the TEAA 2005 workshop we examined the conceptual underpinnings of enterprise application architecture. We are grateful to our keynote speaker Laura Haas for sharing her insights with us.

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