SOA for Dummies 2nd IBM Limited Edition Mini eBook

Service Oriented Architecture For Dummies, 2nd IBM Limited Edition. Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) is the most important technology initiative facing businesses today. SOA is game changing, and early SOA successes make it clear that SOA is here to stay. This book introduces you to the basics of SOA in context with the real life experiences of seven companies. Seen through the varied business environments depicted in each of the case studies, we hope you will recognize that SOA is more than a bunch of new software products strung together to allow technology companies to have something else to sell. SOA represents a dramatic change in the relationship between business and IT. SOA makes technology a true business enabler and empowers business and technology leaders alike.

Bookmark it now.

Kleber Rodrigo de Carvalho

IBM WebSphere System z Software Podcasts

I’m developer with focus on Java platform, however I’m studying in my Master Business Administration course, high available enterprise server architecture. I already studied mainframe architecture then I realized that there are a lot of technologies in our UNIX servers nowadays that already had in mainframe environment a long time ago. I was googling about System Z and I found out IBM WebSphere System z Software Podcasts.
Take a look on this podcast series, I listened some episodes and I really enjoy it.

Kleber Rodrigo de Carvalho

Smart Work for a Smarter Planet

I was reading SmartSOA blog about Top 5 Announcements from IBM Impact 2009, then I found out the SmartSOA channel on youtube, and specially I like this video about Smart Work for a Smarter Planet. I’m an IBMer. Check it out .

Kleber Rodrigo de Carvalho

Utilizing Web 2.0 in business

While Web 2.0 has been a huge hit with consumers, some businesses have been much slower to embrace it. Many companies, however, are now realizing the great potential of Web 2.0 and how Web 2.0 services such as YouTube, Twitter, and SlideShare can provide value to their organizations. See how businesses can exploit the power of Web 2.0 services while simultaneously improving workplace relationships. Empower your employees to share information that helps generate sales leads, aids in recruitment, and assists in strengthening your company’s brand, image, and corporate identity. Explore business-oriented Web 2.0 tools such as LinkedIn and CrunchBase and the Web services and APIs that many of these tools offer, allowing their benefits to be incorporated into other applications. Continue reading it here.

Kleber Rodrigo de Carvalho

Cloud computing versus grid computing

When I think about grid computing I think about an application such as SETI@home. Grid computing is the application of several computers to a single problem at the same time, usually to a scientific or technical problem that requires a great number of computer processing cycles or access to large amounts of data. What distinguishes grid computing from conventional cluster computing systems is that grids tend to be more loosely coupled, heterogeneous, and geographically dispersed. Also, while a computing grid may be dedicated to a specialized application, it is often constructed with the aid of general-purpose grid software libraries and middleware.

I don’t know why I was mixing up grid computing with peer-to-peer. A peer-to-peer (or P2P) computer network uses diverse connectivity between participants in a network and the cumulative bandwidth of network participants rather than conventional centralized resources where a relatively low number of servers provide the core value to a service or application. A pure P2P network does not have the notion of clients or servers but only equal peer nodes that simultaneously function as both “clients” and “servers” to the other nodes on the network. This model of network arrangement differs from the client-server model where communication is usually to and from a central server. When I think about peer-to-peer network I keep in mind applications such as aMule for Linux, e-mule for Windows and Vuze (formerly Azureus).

Cloud computing is a style of computing in which dynamically scalable and often virtualized resources are provided as a service over the Internet. Users need not have knowledge of, expertise in, or control over the technology infrastructure “in the cloud” that supports them.The concept incorporates infrastructure as a service (IaaS), platform as a service (PaaS) and software as a service (SaaS) as well as other recent technology trends that have the common theme of reliance on the Internet for satisfying the computing needs of the users. Cloud computing services usually provide common business applications online that are accessed from a web browser, while the software and data are stored on the servers.

Cloud computing is often confused with grid computing (“a form of distributed computing whereby a ‘super and virtual computer’ is composed of a cluster of networked, loosely-coupled computers, acting in concert to perform very large tasks”), utility computing (the “packaging of computing resources, such as computation and storage, as a metered service similar to a traditional public utility such as electricity”)and autonomic computing (“computer systems capable of self-management”). When I think about cloud computing, I keep in mind companies such as IBM, Amazon, Google, Microsoft or Yahoo which are some of the major cloud computing service providers.

If you want additional information about grid computing and cloud computing I advise you read these references below:

RightScale Blog – Cloud Computing vs. Grid Computing

developerWorks – Cloud computing versus grid computing

Kleber Rodrigo de Carvalho

Market Share Statistics regarding Browsers

Data that provides valuable insight into significant trends for Internet usage.
IE is still the number 1 with 66%, however FF is with 22%.
Poor Chrome 1,42%, it is behind of Safari 8%.

Source – Browser Market Share

Source – Browser Version Market Share

It isn’t good. There are persons using IE 6 which doesn’t have the last security patches.
I’m still using FF as my main browser. There is no Chrome on Linux yet, because that I didn’t install it so far.

When Google released the first version of its Chrome web browser, many eyebrows were raised over the fact that it updated itself automatically and silently, in the background, without user intervention or even so much as a notice. As it turns out, this has been a brilliant move by Google, as Chrome users are the most likely to have up-to-date installations of their browser, followed at a respectable distance by Firefox users. Safari and Opera trail behind significantly. Chrome Users Most Up to Date, Firefox Second

Keep you browser safe.

Kleber Rodrigo de Carvalho

What will Oracle’s Planned Acquisition of Sun Mean for Java

Whilst Sun Microsystems and Oracle are hailing Oracle’s purchase of Sun as a huge boost for Java many in the community are not so sure, wondering what kind of control Oracle will seek to exert over the platform. Continue reading it here.

Kleber Rodrigo de Carvalho