The most prominent Web applications in use today are data-intensive. Scores of database management systems across the Internet access and maintain large amounts of structured data for e-commerce, on-line trading, banking, digital libraries, and other high-volume sites.Developing and maintaining thes
Java Web Services Architecture (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Data Management Systems)
โ Scribed by James McGovern, Sameer Tyagi, Michael Stevens, Sunil Mathew
- Publisher
- Morgan Kaufmann
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 786
- Series
- The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Data Management Systems
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This book is so long getting to the point, it really is a pain to read. It has 800+ pages, a lot too many. Verbose and repeating itself, just frustrating.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
You go online to buy a digital camera. Soon, you realize you've bought a more expensive camera than intended, along with extra batteries, charger, and graphics software-all at the prompting of the retailer.Happy with your purchases? The retailer certainly is, and if you are too, you both can be said
Component Database Systems is a collection of invited chapters by the researchers making the most influential contributions in the database industry's trend toward componentizationThis book represents the sometimes-divergent, sometimes-convergent approaches taken by leading database vendors as they
Shows students, programmers, system designers and researchers how to design, implement, and analyze distributed algorithms. Familiarizes readers with the most important problems, algorithms, and impossibility results in the area. Provides the basic mathematical tools for designing new algorithms
I have a great deal of experience preparing data for analysis. I was looking for a book that would add to my understanding of and enhance my organization for data preparation. This is not that book. At best, the book provides insight into the types of issues faced in preparing data and emphasizes
The Web is causing a revolution in how we represent, retrieve, and process information Its growth has given us a universally accessible database-but in the form of a largely unorganized collection of documents. This is changing, thanks to the simultaneous emergence of new ways of representing data: