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Posts on the
Design Decomposition Blog
Iridium Satellite Collision in Space
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
(The Acronym) SOA is (Perhaps) Dead (at Some Companies); Long Live Services
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
Atomicity
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
Well-Formed Business Process Diagrams
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 [...]
November 18, 2008
Recent Business Process Modeling Books
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 [...]
October 9, 2008
The Design Decomposition Blog
is written by Doug Barry.
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There are three options for using the data in this example relational database. They are:

  1. Leaving the data in the relational database
  2. Converting the data and storing it in an object database
  3. Leaving the data in the relational database and using an object database

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Related recent articles from Google News

Ruby on Rails 3.0 now available
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Jolt Product Excellence Awards: App Libraries and Frameworks
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Telerik rounds the package out with additional libraries for report generation, object relational mapping, and code analysis. There's the usual array of ...
Jolt Awards: And the Round 2 Winners Are... Dr. Dobb's (blog)
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1 Sep 2010 at 8:54am
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... positioned for enterprise-level projects with a host of new functionality that brings it more in line with other object-relational mapping (ORM) tools. ...
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30 Aug 2010 at 10:45am
Sitefinity Web CMS Hits 4.0 Milestone, Adds an SDK
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... allowing them to add Silverlight interface tricks or Telerik's own OpenAccess object-relational mapping plumbing tool to their sites. ...
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Related books at Amazon.com

Multimedia Databases: An Object-Relational Approach
Multimedia Databases: An Object-Relational Approach
by Lynne Dunckley
Average Customer Review: 4 stars based on 1 review.
Customer Review: Bought it used, was supposed to be in perfect condition, but had a little wear and tear here and there. Still in great condition and worth the rebate, shipping was also much fast than what was initially indicated.
Practical Application of Object-Oriented Techniques to Relational Databases (Object Management Group Series on Object Technology)
Practical Application of Object-Oriented Techniques to Relational Databases (Object Management Group Series on Object Technology)
by Donald K. Burleson
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Publication Date: March 1994
Pro LINQ Object Relational Mapping in C# 2008
Pro LINQ Object Relational Mapping in C# 2008
by Vijay P. Mehta
Average Customer Review: 4 stars based on 11 reviews.
Customer Review: I am not sure what the 2 and 3 star reviews are about, because I thought this book was excellent, and considering the book says "intermediate" I'm not sure why people were expecting a "deep technical ORM, LINQ to SQL, or EF" book. The book is broken into 5 different parts: Part 1 - ORM Concepts - This is really good background for p...
More related books: Search Amazon.com for object-relational mapping