Rating:  Summary: Save your money, don't buy this book. Review: A book that takes the reader all over the place. The author pretty much cut and pasted the words from numeruous sources(plagiarism comes to mind) The author is neither an expert nor very good writer. The MSDN contains the same exact information so go there and save your dollars for a better book.
Rating:  Summary: Can I get my money back ? Review: huh ?? what is this book about ? absolute waste of time.
Rating:  Summary: A must read Review: I can't say enough about this book. The content is well organized, and very well written. How often do you read every page of a book about programming?(esp. this publisher)What is key in this book is not the choice of browser (or XML) , it is the principles. Buy it or borrow it, but you must read it.
Rating:  Summary: Good philosophical/theorical content, lack real-life example Review: I was more than excited through the first chapters to see that the level of the author was very high in theorical and/or philosophical content. But it faded out when I saw that this book did not really included real-life examples or case-studies. A problem that I often see is that the examples included in the book are just like data island, they don't know about each other and let us decide where we can really use them. This book does have one small case-study toward the end but it does not reflect so much the high theorical level of the beginning. As mentionned in a different review, a lot of buzzwords, and it's true; then again, this book DOES give you a GREAT THEORICAL aproach to SOLVE Distributed Applications PROBLEMS, but lacks in it's bringing us a good implementation of solutions (even though the level of coding was fairly high). What I hope in the future, is just a book that will join all those buzzwords into one great application with all those technologies & softwares.
Rating:  Summary: Good philosophical/theorical content, lack real-life example Review: I was more than excited through the first chapters to see that the level of the author was very high in theorical and/or philosophical content. But it faded out when I saw that this book did not really included real-life examples or case-studies. A problem that I often see is that the examples included in the book are just like data island, they don't know about each other and let us decide where we can really use them. This book does have one small case-study toward the end but it does not reflect so much the high theorical level of the beginning. As mentionned in a different review, a lot of buzzwords, and it's true; then again, this book DOES give you a GREAT THEORICAL aproach to SOLVE Distributed Applications PROBLEMS, but lacks in it's bringing us a good implementation of solutions (even though the level of coding was fairly high). What I hope in the future, is just a book that will join all those buzzwords into one great application with all those technologies & softwares.
Rating:  Summary: argh - an architecture of buzzwords Review: It's taken me a while to get through this book due to a busy schedule, but I have to see it's probably the best n-tier book Wrox have got out at the moment
Rating:  Summary: Great Concepts... Review: Mohr has done a great job conceptualizing the future of distributed applications. Although I think we're going to see a derivation off the specifics of what he mentions -- distributed applications are absolutely the wave of the future -- with XML at the forefront. Excellent resource with plenty to think about. Don't expect the world from the book -- expect a good solid representation on future implementation of distributed apps.
Rating:  Summary: argh - an architecture of buzzwords Review: Please buy Moniz' book and not this one if you are interested in building a real architecture and not just experimenting with the latest buzzwords. XML is good but the author is too enamoured of the technology to tell you how to use it well. The other reviewers didn't miss the point - the 5 principles he outlined are important but not the most critical. Just read them and think for yourself if you don't believe me...
Rating:  Summary: It's the future Review: This book demonstrates how web sites will be built in the future. LDAP (especially relevant for Windows 2000 development), XML, it's all in there. I would have liked to see more emphasis on Windows 2000, but understandably this is a book about what you can do with today's technology. Regarding the previous review.. wire efficiency is not everything. XML provides interoperability and can better withstand evolution than COM interfaces. I too was concerned about wire efficiency but from my own experience, the time saved in development thanks to XML far outweighed the performance concerns.
Rating:  Summary: Visionary, yet pragmatic Review: This is a 'should read' book for practicing software architects and those who aspire to be architects. It postulates five basic principles, with complete and orderly logic to back them up, and then proceeds to apply them to realistic problems. This is about as close to a 'how to' cookbook for emerging web technologies as I've seen. The only reason I can't give this book 5 stars is that many people who need to know this material will avoid it due to the Microsoft-centric title. But, for those of us who keep our politics and careers in an open relationship, it should prove to be a very worthwhile and provocative excursion.
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