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| Robert Daigneau - Monster.com |
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1111 Views :: Robert Daigneau
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Rob Daigneau - Monster.com has over 15 years experience designing and implementing enterprise-class database-driven applications for a broad array of industries from manufacturing, to financial services, to retail and wholesale. Rob is the Director of Platform Architecture for Monster.com, one of the most visited Web sites in the world.
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Markus Egger |
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Carl Franklin |
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| Robert Daigneau - Anti-Patterns in Software Projects - The Human Factor |
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7951 Views :: Patterns, Robert Daigneau, 12:30 PM
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Anti-Patterns in Software Projects - The Human Factor
The creation of software products is a highly complex endeavor. Technology and programming are the easy part. The hard part is the human factor, the ingredient which ultimately has the greatest influence upon the success of any software project. Join us in this session to see how we can be our own worst enemies, and even subvert the benefits that we should be realizing from methodologies like Agile.
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| Robert Daigneau - Using Design Patterns in ASP.Net 2.0 Web Sites |
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2612 Views :: Patterns, Robert Daigneau, 4:15 PM
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Using Design Patterns in ASP.Net 2.0 Web Sites
Design patterns are in vogue these days. The challenge that confronts many architects and developers is how to apply patterns in the real world. Many wonder where specific patterns might apply, if they are truly practical in actual usage, and what benefits might be realized by employing them.
In this session you’ll see how a live web site was developed using .Net 2.0 and Visual Studio 2005. We’ll cover a broad range of topics, from how various .Net components and classes are used, to the architecture and design patterns used.
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| Rob Daigneau - Service-Orientation with .Net and the Web Service Software Factory |
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2850 Views :: Enterprise Architecture, Robert Daigneau, 3:00 PM
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Service-Orientation with .Net and the Web Service Software Factory
We’ve all heard the promises associated with Service-Orientation. Vendors suggest that when we use SOA, we stand to achieve greater reuse, business agility, interoperability, and ease of integration. Is it really possible that SOA will be able to deliver upon such lofty goals?
In this session we’ll review how SOA differs from Distributed Object-Oriented Architectures, and how some of the goals of SOA might be achieved through the application of specific design patterns.
You’ll also see how Microsoft’s new “Web Service Software Factory” can help you build services that follow “best design practices” while balancing the need to be productive.
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Ambrose Little |
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20 August, 2008
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