B2B Application Integration: e-Business-Enable Your Enterprise

Author: David S. Linthicum
List Price: $44.99
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ISBN: 0201709368
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Pub Co (15 January, 2001)
Edition: Paperback
Sales Rank: 23,007
Average Customer Rating: 4.58 out of 5

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Customer Reviews

Rating: 5 out of 5
The B2B Bible
If you're looking for the bible on B2B application integration, or just application integration in general, this is the book for you. The author does a great job in bringing very complex subject matter to an understandable level, including the illusive notion of middleware. I've read other books on middleware, and this book beats them all.

However, the value of this book is not the middleware discussion, but the overview of application integration and its use as a mechanism to move information, in real-time, within and between businesses. The author covers the types of application integration for B2B, enabling technology, approaches, use cases, patterns, and emerging standards including XSLT and RosettaNet. I really liked the discussion of supply chain integration and how it relates to B2B application integration.

It's a winner. I'll be going back to this book time after time. My copy already appears a bit raged out.


Rating: 5 out of 5
A Good Balance of Strategy and Technology
In looking for a good book on middleware, application integration, and B2B integration, I found that this book provides most of the information I needed. This book offers both strategic and technical information, and I found that helpful with both putting a rather confusing paradigm in the proper perspective, as well as enough new technical information to figure out what works where. The bottom line is that the strategic information is worth the price of the book, and the technical information makes this book mandatory for anybody who has to integrate two or more applications. Read this book first, it will make your life a whole lot easier, it did mine.


Rating: 5 out of 5
Complete, pragmatic and a top reference for architects
This book provides a pragmatic approach to B2B integration by focusing on integrating existing systems instead of addressing a "clean slate" approach to the task.

Part I consists of a single chapter that defines B2B application integration, and how to leverage your existing assets and make a sound business case to bring this about. It also provides a quick overview of the key role middleware plays and emphasizes the fact that a truly integrated suite of applications needs to have a built-in mechanism for synchronizing and responding to business events. This is a key point to the approach and differentiates integrated applications from a collection of systems that have been kludged together to communicate with one another.

Chapter 1 also gives a classification of five different approaches to application integration. This is followed in Part II with a chapter about each approach. The value here is twofold: (1) the approaches can be viewed as design patterns (with some effort because each approach is presented in a slightly different way), and (2) techniques such as SEI's architecture trade-off analysis method (ATAM) can be applied from a technical perspective to select the best approach for a specific environment. Part III is devoted to the technology that an architect will have at his or her disposal to apply to the integration. Starting with an introduction to middleware in chapter 7, this part of the book ends at chapter 13 after thoroughly covering the strengths and weaknesses of each middleware model and associated components. What impressed me the most about this part of the book is the matter-of-fact, unbiased discussion. The author used products for examples, but did not favor any particular one, which is a refreshing change from some books on the topic that read like vendor literature.

Integration standards are covered in Part IV, with the same unbiased approach used in the preceding part, and with the same frank discussions of strengths and weaknesses. Key standards (both De Facto and De Jure) are covered, including XML, RosettaNet's methods, BizTalk and XSLT. The part of the book also devotes a chapter to understanding supply chain integration and ends with a final chapter titled B2B Application Integration Moving Forward. This final chapter is packed with advice and things to consider, such as moving from EDI to XML, discussions on security, performance and stability, etc.

Mr. Linthicum has done a thorough job of covering the complex issues associated with transforming existing systems into an integrated suite of applications that will support B2B. I like the way he has structured the book, which allows an architect to derive design patterns as well as perform formal trade-off analysis at the technical level for both the architecture and the building blocks with which to build the architecture - or rather, to transform an existing architecture into one that fully supports B2B. This book should be on the desk of every system architect and gets a solid five stars.


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