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programming & internet technologies
Building J2EE-based Web Services for the
Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA)
This Immersive Learning workshop has just been revised for the
year 2006 and provides participants with state-of-the-art principles for
understanding and building a Service-Oriented Architecture with Java-based Web
Services technologies. Everything has been updated and tailored to meet new
industry requirements. It is a hands-on, lab-based learning experience for J2EE
developer teams wanting to understand the SOA and Web services rationale and
gain hands-on experience in the second-generation SOA framework and technologies
that are proving to be the next major paradigm shift in Web-based distributed
computing for the enterprise.
In addition to the core technologies that make up Web Services, developer
teams will learn the philosophy behind the SOA, why it is all the rage, what is
groundbreaking about it, how it fits within J2EE, what it's best for and what
it's worst for, and where it holds potential for better integrated solutions
across the enterprise.
Who Should Attend
Software developers and their managers needing an overview of
new trends in IT, architects and managers who must collaborate with technical
staff, team leaders of J2EE projects, legacy code reuse projects, and business
process improvement initiatives, IT project managers that need to harness the
full power of J2EE for crafting secure distributed web services-based portal
solutions, hard-core J2EE programmers, system integrators, and technical staff
potentially involved in building an SOA.
Prerequisites
Software developers should have 1-2 years experience with
servlets and JSPs, and should be familiar with XML. Executives, managers, and
project leads need only to have in mind the broad scope of the demands on their
respective areas of responsibility, and an open mind.
Workshop
Objectives:
- Understand and intelligently discuss with peers and
managers the competencies of Web Services and their core technologies.
- Understand the big picture, the advantages and
disadvantages, and what it takes to maintain deployments.
- Design, develop, and deploy real-world J2EE Web
Services.
- Expose existing Java applications and components as XML
Web Services.
- Write Java components that access remote Web Services
hosted by a third party.
- Read and understand a WSDL document.
- Parse, process, and respond to a SOAP message,
synchronously or asynchronously.
- Employ in real-world solutions the tools and APIs
provided by the JWSD and that lead the industry.
- Come away with hands-on experience in the leading tools
in this space that facilitate development and maintenance of SOA
Web-Services deployments.
To request a comprehensive
curriculum outline click... HERE.
Last updated on
April 30, 2008
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