Open AccessBook
Enterprise Application Integration
David S. Linthicum
- 01 Jan 2000
866
TL;DR: This practical guide to implementing an EAI solution leads you through all the major steps, including identifying sources of data, building the enterprise metadata model, process integration, identifying application interfaces, mapping information movement, selecting and applying the technologies, testing, and maintenance.
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Abstract: Organizations that are able to integrate their applications and data sources have a distinct competitive advantage: strategic utilization of company data and technology for greater efficiency and profit. But IT managers attempting integration face daunting challenges--disparate legacy systems; a hodgepodge of hardware, operating systems, and networking technology; proprietary packaged applications; and more.Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) offers a solution to this increasingly urgent business need. It encompasses technologies that enable business processes and data to speak to one another across applications, integrating many individual systems into a seamless whole.Enterprise Application Integrationprovides a comprehensive examination of EAI. You will find an overview of EAI goals and approaches, a review of the technologies that support it, and a roadmap to implementing an EAI solution. You will also find an in-depth explanation of the four major types of EAI: data-level, application interface-level, method-level, and user interface-level. The book describes in detail the middleware models and technologies that support these different approaches, including: Application servers, including the use of Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) and ActiveX Message-oriented middleware (MOM) and remote procedure calls (RPCs) Distributed objects, looking at CORBA and COM Database-oriented middleware and standards, including ODBC, JDBC, and OLE DB Java middleware standards Message brokers New process automation and workflow technologyThis practical guide to implementing an EAI solution leads you through all the major steps, including identifying sources of data, building the enterprise metadata model, process integration, identifying application interfaces, mapping information movement, selecting and applying the technologies, testing, and maintenance. Other key topics include integrating packaged applications such as SAP R/3 and PeopleSoft, integrating the supply chain using EAI, the role of XML, and process automation. Comprehensive, practical, and clearly written, this essential resource will help anyone involved in this important business area understand the nature of EAI, its tools and techniques, and how to apply it for a significant business advantage. 0201615835B04062001
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Citations
Patent
Consistent set of interfaces derived from a business object model
Michael Seubert,Jochen Rasch,Axel Kuehl,Dirk Becker,Markus Biehler,Daniel Bock,Andreas Brossler,Renzo Colle,Giovani Deledda,Ralf Dielschneider,Robert Doerner,Phillippe Drouin,Karsten Egetoft,Stefan Franke,Wernere Gnan,Daniel Goldmann,Antonia Gross,Patrick Gross,Nils Hartmann,Stephan Hetzer,Christine Hofmann,Johann Kemmer,Joachim Kenntner,Adam Kiwon,Arndt Koester,Thilo Kraehmer,Andreas Krompholz,Corinne Kuster,Marcus Lotz,Otto Makris,Ramesh Nn,Dietmar Nowotny,Till Oppert,Markus Peter,Georg Podhajsky,Ruediger Radcke,Michael Redmann,Frank Reinemuth,Paola Sala,Arnulf Schueler,Dagmar Schulze,Ralf Sievers,Jan Stephan,Sergej Stotz,Frank Thome,Andre Wagner,Burkhard H. Weiss,Rudolf Winkel,Renato Zadro,Brit Ziemendorf +49 more
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