You might have seen the recent news reports about the collision between U.S. and Russian communication satellites. The U.S. satellite was one of the Iridium satellites. What wasn’t reported and you probably don’t know is that an object database management system (ODBMS) is an important part of the Iridium system. Even though ODBMSs are a [...]
February 13, 2009
I am now also posting on the Cutter Blog. My initial posting is (The Acronym) SOA is (Perhaps) Dead (at Some Companies); Long Live Services. It is a response to Anne Thomas Manes’ SOA is Dead; Long Live Services on her blog at the Burton Group.
January 9, 2009
The typical definition of an atomic task or process is one that cannot be decomposed further. This is vague and subject to interpretation. The Decomposition Matrix on this site uses a specific definition: A task (for business process diagrams) or a process (for data flow diagrams) is atomic if every input relates to every output [...]
December 3, 2008
My last posting referenced the criteria for a well-formed business process diagram mentioned in Business Process Driven SOA using BPMN and BPEL by Matjaz B. Juric and Kapil Pant. I am going to expand on their criteria to create a more comprehensive definition of a well-formed business process diagram.
To start, here are three criteria from [...]
November 18, 2008
I recently received two new books on business process modeling. Both books looked interesting because they had great titles. As it turns out, one book is great and the other not so good.
The not so good book is Business Process Driven SOA using BPMN and BPEL by Matjaz B. Juric and Kapil Pant. There are [...]
October 9, 2008
The Design Decomposition Blog is written by Doug Barry.
Shown below is the SQLJ Part 0 execution environment. Nearly everything in the
client is in Java (JDBC might not be entirely Java).
There are nearly 400 pages of articles on this site with over 40 pages on database concepts and standards.
Search this site for more articles
Custom Search
Browse this site for more articles
Click on the topics below to browse the articles on this site. You can see more detail by clicking on the arrows. This highlights the location of the current
article: SQLJ execution environment.
Software Development Engineer, Community Mashable (blog) Relational Database design and SQL skills are preferred. * Candidates should have experience developing highly scalable web applications and services. ... 29 Jul 2010 at 5:55pm
Cisco Details Enterprise Security Threats eSecurity Planet Cisco said Adobe Reader/Acrobat, Sun Java, and Adobe Flash were the three most common malware targets over the first half of 2010. ... and more » 28 Jul 2010 at 10:01am
Doing IT on the factory floor SA Instrumentation and Control ... buffering to many databases including MS SQL Server, MySQL, Oracle and IBM along with support for messaging queues like Java Messaging Service (JMS). ... 30 Jul 2010 at 2:18am
Java Programming with Oracle SQLJ by Jason Price Average Customer Review: based on 10 reviews. Customer Review: My knowledge of Oracle and Java is beginner/intermediate level and I like this book a lot. The book explains how SQLJ relates to SQL, PL/SQL, Java, JDBC and it provides a good introduction to the JDeveloper IDE (Integrated Development Environment). The book is written very clearly and the appearance and organization of the text is w...
Professional Java Server Programming J2EE Edition by Subrahmanyam Allamaraju, Andrew Longshaw, Daniel O'Connor, Gordon Van Huizen, Jason Diamond, John Griffin, Mac Holden, Marcus Daley, Mark Wilcox, Richard Browett Average Customer Review: based on 30 reviews. Customer Review: This book is one the most comprehensive ones that I've bought. It provides you with most of the possible technologies that you could use in a basic J2EE application. I love the section on the J2EE architecture. For newbies I typcially request that they read that section first. It does justice to basic topics like JDBC & Servlets & t...
Professional Oracle 8i Application Programming with Java, PL/SQL and XML by Michael Awai, Matthew Bortniker, John Carnell, Kelly Cox, Daniel O'Connor, Mario Zucca, Sean Dillon, Thomas Kyte, Ann Horton, Frank Hubeny, Glenn E. Mitchell II, Kevin Mukhar, Gary Nicol, Guy Ruth Hammond Average Customer Review: based on 10 reviews. Customer Review: To produce this book, Wrox took twenty expert Oracle developers and had each of them write about their area of expertise. The result is that whether you are a manager, a developer, or a DBA, if you are working with Oracle 8i this book should be on your desk. This book covers virtually every topic that you need to understand about th...