Rating:  Summary: Great book for EJB novice developer- well rounded approach Review: My boss instructed my to read this book a few days after I started a new job doing E-Commerce apps. Within a week I was writing EJB's, mapping them to my database, deploying them on my app server, and successfully accessing them with a client . This book does not go too much into detail, but you can sure bet I was one happy developer after I gained so much info from one book. It packs a good punch (ouch! that hurt) Anyway, you can learn a lot and fast with this book. I was so happy, instead of taking the train, I did cartwheels all the way home. Have fun with this book, I did.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent for EJB beginners Review: this is the best book i ever read on EJB's and it's a must for JAVA Professional.
Rating:  Summary: The best book on Enterprise JavaBeans Review: It's no surprise that an Oreilly book can be this good. I am half way through reading this book and I am very excited to tell everybody that this is the book to buy on Enterprise JavaBeans.
Rating:  Summary: Awesome introduction to ejb Review: I tried reading other ejb books but only ended up confused. This book was the first that made it very easy to understand this technology. It was also very thorough. The best book on ejb bar none.
Rating:  Summary: The best technical book I've ever read! Review: I've read a few EJB books (and a lot other books and manuals.) They are no comparison to this book! While other EJB books are loaded with buzz words, this book uses the precise language that a programmer can understand. For example, no other book explains exactly what ejbPostCreate() can do that ejbCreate() cannot; no other book clearly explains the dynamics among the home object, the remote object and the bean instance; and no other book clearly shows the difference of lifecycle among different EJBs. When I read this book, everything is spelled out in precise terms. I don't need to read in-between the lines to guess what the author is trying to say. This book is superb! My hats off to the author Richard Monson-Haefel!
Rating:  Summary: Already outdated by 1.1 but Review: does an excellent job on covering 1.0
Rating:  Summary: 30 minutes...take you into EJB world.. Review: I enter a bookshop and pick up this book.. I can get EJB concepts very quickly.. when I would like to buy one after a few days, it is sold out ...
Rating:  Summary: Great book but for Advanced Java Developer* Review: If u need to know about EJB here is the book. This book has good examples, very detail in explaining presistence,CTM, mapping, transaction. This is a Bible for people writing EJB.
Rating:  Summary: An ideal place to start Review: I reviewed this book prior to publication. It teaches EJB very thoroughly in well-judged steps, and very importantly it describes the why as well as the what of EJB excellently. It will help any developer to ensure that his/her first EJB application is portable, scaleable and flexible. I would particularly recommend it to client-server application developers wishing to transition to internet application development.
Rating:  Summary: Authoritative EJB Review: I've been technical editor of this and other EJB texts. My company is in production on two continents, in several spoken languages under EJB - and has been for many months. The best advice I can give you regarding Richard's book: buy, read, and comprehend it.
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