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  Books : Mastering Enterprise JavaBeans, 3rd Edition


List Price: $45.00
Amazon.com's Price: $29.25
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.133
EAN: 9780764576829
ISBN: 0764576828
Label: Wiley
Manufacturer: Wiley
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 839
Publication Date: December 08, 2004
Publisher: Wiley
Sales Rank: 405137
Studio: Wiley




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Editorial Review:

Product Description
  • Includes more than 30 percent revised material and five new chapters, covering the new 2.1 features such as EJB Timer Service and JMS as well as the latest open source Java solutions
  • The book was developed as part of TheServerSide.com online EJB community, ensuring a built-in audience
  • Demonstrates how to build an EJB system, program with EJB, adopt best practices, and harness advanced EJB concepts and techniques, including transactions, persistence, clustering, integration, and performance optimization
  • Offers practical guidance on when not to use EJB and how to use simpler, less costly open source technologies in place of or in conjunction with EJB



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Holy book of EJB 2.1
This book is truly the complete book on EJB Specification 2.1 and more. By more I mean to say that not only does it focus on EJB and their real life implementations but also on the underlying technologies of distributed programming like RMI-IIOP and JNDI. It talks about the best practices and performance optimization techniques that can be used while working on EJBs. For me this book the holy book on EJBs.

This for people who do not know about EJB much and for those who are already grandmasters ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Ok in its sense
The title says mastering EJB...which is ok for a title but this book lacks in content that is needed for a beginner. This book claims that it's audience will be a beginner or an advanced guy and I feel that it is oriented more towards the experienced reader. The first 3 chapters explains the basics of Enterprise computing using J2EE environment and a simple example of the Hello Bean EJB, which is good for a beginner. But once you start delving into chapters 4, 5 and furthur in, you will happen to see things ... Read More



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - No longer a master
I have the two earlier editions of this book, but this book hardly added any value or did anything better than those earlier editions. The new chapters does not meet the expectations - I suspect the new authors messed up quality of the book. The new examples on EJB Web services is nothing but a hello world and I even doubt the new authors had any expertise to test those examples. Now I find this book does'nt make any help to me and it is no longer fit to call it as a Mastering EJB book. Now this book would collect ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent - great examples, covers everything
This is an excellent and complete book on EJB. I read 1st and 2nd edition of the O'Reilly EJB book based on recommendations; I have to say the Ed Roman book is far superior - he covers every detail, including peripheral considerations, and has complete and numerous examples. 1 downside - many typos - but thankfully they are so obvious, it doesn't detract from comprehension.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Good for a newbie but not the best
This is a good book for a newbie with loads of theories though this book stays far behind the enterprise level computing and on implementation of EJB driven applications. There's a huge gap between what this book describes and the real development environment of EJBs.

Never rely on the sample codes and the methodologies have been used in this book for those are not the best development approaches. This book consists of several pitfalls and not suitable to be used as an EJB development guideline (e:g: this ... Read More







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