W. Clay Richardson is a software consultant specializing in
distributed solutions, particularly portal solutions. He has
fielded multiple open-source Web and portal solutions, serving in
roles ranging from senior architect to development lead. He is a
co-author of More Java Pitfalls, also published by Wiley
& Sons. As an adjunct professor of computer science for
Virginia Tech, he teaches graduate-level coursework in
object-oriented development with Java. He holds degrees from
Virginia Tech and the Virginia Military Institute.
Donald Avondolio is a software consultant with over
seventeen years of experience developing and deploying enterprise
applications. He began his career in the aerospace industry
developing programs for flight simulators, and later became an
independent contractor, crafting healthcare middleware and
low-level device drivers for an assortment of mechanical devices.
Most recently, he has built e-commerce applications for numerous
high-profile companies, including The Home Depot, Federal Computer
Week, the U.S. Postal Service, and General Electric. He is
currently a technical architect and developer on several portal
deployments. Don also serves as an adjunct professor at Virginia
Tech, where he teaches progressive object-oriented design and
development methodologies, with an emphasis on patterns.
Joe Vitale has been working with the latest cutting-edge
Java technology intensely. His most recent focus has been on Java
portals and object-relational mapping tools. One of these projects
was writing a content management system that contained role-based
authentication of users and the capability for users to upload,
delete, and manage files, and secure resources. The whole system
was designed to plug right into a portal”s interface and
enable the portal to directly communicate with it to obtain its
resources. Object-relational mapping technologies have also been a
focus, using Apache”s Object Relational Bridge (OJB).
Peter Len has over seven years” experience
performing Web-based and Java application development in a
client-server environment. He has designed, coded, and implemented
data and Web site components for each aspect of a three-tier
architecture. Mr. Len has been developing with Java for over five
years and has recently been involved with portal and Web-service
development. He holds a master”s degree in both international
affairs and computer information systems.
Kevin T. Smith is a technical director and principal
software architect at Mc Donald Bradley, Inc., where he develops
security solutions for Web service-based systems. He has
focused his career on building enterprise solutions based on
open-source tools. He holds undergraduate and graduate degrees in
computer science, software systems engineering, and information
security. He has taught undergraduate courses in computer science,
given technical presentations on Web services and Java programming
at numerous technology conferences, and authored several technical
books, including Essential XUL Programming (Wiley 2001),
More Java Pitfalls (Wiley 2003), and The Semantic Web: A
Guide to the Future of XML, Web Services, and Knowledge
Management (Wiley 2003).
1 Ebooks door Peter Len
Peter Len & W. Clay Richardson: Professional Portal Development with Open Source Tools
What is this book about? Open source technology enables you to build customized enterprise portal frameworks with more flexibility and fewer limitations. This book explains the fundamentals of a powe …
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€26.99