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Service Oriented Architecture For Dummies (For Dummies (Computer/Tech))
by Judith Hurwitz, Robin Bloor, Carol Baroudi, and Marcia Kaufman - For Dummies

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  • Average Customer Review: Based on 13 reviews.
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: 56382


Product Description

  • SOA is the most important initiative facing IT today and is difficult to grasp; this book demystifies the complex topic of SOA and makes it accessible to all those people who hear the term but aren't really sure what it means
  • This team of well-respected authors explains that SOA is a collection of applications that enables resources to be available to other participants in a network using any service-based technology
  • Examines how SOA enables faster and cheaper application development and how it offers reusable code that can be used across various applications
  • Covers what SOA is, why it matters, how it can impact businesses, and how to take steps to implement SOA in a corporate environment


Featured Customer Reviews

A Good Book but Not for Dummies!, May 06, 2008
I like this book because it is easy to read and it explains basic SOA concepts. This book will help you understand the major concepts but it is not a book that can get you started building services, SOA infrastructure and middleware.

And it is obviously not for dummies!

Snake Oil, March 06, 2008
Reading this book may provide you with a few good buzzwords at IT cocktail parties, but forget about understanding what SOA is, and how it gets done in the real world.

Having worked in the IT industry as a consultant and executive for a long time, and having been on both sides of the business/technical divide, the title of this book intrigued me. So I thought I'd give it a shot, to see how SOA might be simply explained from a business, non technical point of view. But after reading the first 150 pages of the book and skimming through the rest, I quicky realized the book is useless. Both for business oriented people, and even more for technical people. In fact, the single web page SOA entry at Wikipedia will provide one with more knowledge and understanding of SOA than this whole book, in probably a 10th of the time.

SOA is real, (Amazon and Google are first rate implementation examples) but you would not know this from this book. Nor know how to go about implementing it. Extremely verbose and vague, the book contents seem to epitomize the bad rap executive level consultants sometimes get when they are accused of being payed large sums of money for essentially engaging in buzzwords compliance, all with dubious results.

Next time someone asks you if your enterprise is doing SOA, just say: "Of course we are! We have been re-orienting our IT infrastructure towards a business service centric architecture, with loosely coupled reusable software components!" And if you get paid for your answers, you can keep going on and on with similar language based on each of the words above.
Heck, if you are a consultant, you could even write an entire book! That will be good advertising for your business, and at 300+ pages, nobody will suspect that your understanding of SOA is conceptual and superficial.

Decent for a Beginner, March 04, 2008
This is a goog book to get the basics. Some of the analogies are really good, but they seem to repeat them over and over. Decent reference though

Good overview, but too high level, December 25, 2007
I suppose that, entering into any of the "Dummies" series, one should expect no more than introductory material, the corollary being that more detailed, technical knowledge would lie elsewhere. Thus it is with this book. If you are prepared for a surface buzzing of a broad range of topics relevant to SOA, including such useful matters as the business justification, the parts of an SOA necessarily to make it all work harmoniously, and even the different philosophies from various vendors (Oracle, SAP, etc.), then you'll be happy with this book. If, however, you're looking for a comprehensive treatment, that might begin with the business aspects and general structure, but then dive into the technologies, you'll find this book a disappointment.

I have two specific criticisms that cause my rating to be only three stars:
(1) while the textual coverage of SOA components--governance, security, the repository, and the registry, etc.--is clear, I quite wish that the diagrams were true architecture diagrams, UML-based. The material would have been clearer had it been represented with use case diagrams, activity diagrams, and sequence diagrams, instead of rectangles with lines between them.
(2) My other criticism goes to the gap between what the table of contents suggests, vs. what information the book delivers. That is, when a prospective reader is deciding whether to invest time in a book, typically the table of contents yields reliable information. Sometimes, though, a table of contents overreaches what the book itself is able to achieve. Such is the case here. For example, the Part V table of contents suggests that within would like a treatise on each major vendor's approach to SOA, including IBM, HP, BEA, Oracle, SAP, and JBoss. Alas, the details were too sketchy to be useful.

In brief, then, if the reader is willing to invest eight hours (that's how long this reader required, cover to cover) to gain a broad understanding of SOA, then this might be the book for you. If you're looking for a detailed treatment, or a comprehensive guide, look elsewhere.

I'm no dummy, but this is good!, September 09, 2007
I have always been seriously put off by the "Dummies" series. I would like to buy books that assume some intelligence on the part of the reader. I don't like being talked down to.

But this book doesn't do that. Instead it explains concepts clearly, and has been a great help to me in understanding the clouds of jargon that surround this topic. The explanation of the components of SOA and how they hook together is excellent!

Because I am not yet directly involved, I cannot judge the accuracy of their details (and of course, they may change over time), but since the objective is to get the main concepts across, I believe the authors are successful.

I really wish, though, that the series were called "Achieving Buzzword Compliance in ...".


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