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Part 1: Introduction and overview
August 2004
This article introduces the domains and capabilities of the IBM On Demand Operating Environment and lays the groundwork for subsequent articles in the series, which will demonstrate how to design and implement an on demand solution for the financial services industry, including customer enrollment, personal loan, online trading, and portfolio management scenarios.
Part 2: Use the Enterprise Service Bus to connect disparate applications
September 2004
This article examines a number of Enterprise Service Bus patterns that you see in today's products. Using a business scenario, it illustrates how to integrate a portal application, a CRM application, and a legacy application through a message-driven architecture. The Enterprise Service Bus provides connectivity and the transformation and routing of messages, as well as enables the use of multiple protocols.
Part 3: Use BPEL to create business processes
October 2004
This article examines a number of patterns that you can follow to design and implement your business processes. Using a business scenario, it illustrates how to choreograph intra-enterprises and inter-enterprises services. Business rules are used in the context of the business process so that you can make changes dynamically without affecting the application.
Part 4: Optimize on demand solutions with intelligent orchestration and automated provisioning
November 2004
An on demand solution is resilient and must be able to respond to workload fluctuations. Provisioning is one approach that achieves these requirements. This article shows how to incorporate automatic provisioning into the design of the odFinance personal loan using IBM Tivoli® Intelligent Orchestrator. You can implement the provisioning of a server or a software product in many ways, and this article presents a simple approach by using existing clustering concepts of the IBM WebSphere® Application Server.
Part 5: Use BPEL and the Common Event Infrastructure
January 2005
Use WebSphere Studio Application Developer Integration Edition 5.1.1 and WebSphere Business Integration Server Foundation 5.1.1 to enable Common Event Infrastructure (CEI). And learn how Business Process Execution Language for Web services (BPEL4WS) processes can send events to communicate information about those processes. Discover how process status, activity status, and business-specific data can be encapsulated in an event object and how those events can be consumed programmatically.
Part 6: Optimize your on demand applications and resources using IBM WebSphere Extended Deployment 5.1
February 2005
Learn about the features of WebSphere Extended Deployment 5.1 and find out how it can help you optimize usage of your IT resources. And discover how WebSphere Extended Deployment 5.1 can prioritize and load balance requests intelligently, allowing you to use it to achieve high-performance, on demand business processes.
Part 7: Create a single operations view for business and IT systems using Tivoli Business Systems Manager
March 2005
Get an introduction to IBM Tivoli® Business Systems Manager and learn an approach to create a single view of your business and IT operations. Using a personal loan Business Process Execution Language (BPEL)-based business process and Tivoli Enterprise Console, discover how this approach can allow you to manage your IT resources in the context of business services and improve efficiency.
Part 8: Build J2EE applications with IBM Rational Software Architect Enterprise Patterns
May 2005
IBM Rational® Software Architect Enterprise Patterns can help you rapidly build Java™ 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) applications using reusable assets that represent best practices. Discover how modeling components, or patterns, can assist model-driven development, enabling you to unify the aspects of software design and development.
Part 9: Manage workflow tasks within your company portal
May 2005
Explore new capabilities in WebSphere Portal V5.1 to enable automation of work tasks. Use Rational Application Developer to develop a JavaServer Faces task portlet and configure WebSphere Portal Server to integrate with WebSphere Process Choreographer. And find out how to use the My Tasks portlet shipped with WebSphere Portal V5.1.
Part 10: Monitor business IT services using IBM Tivoli Monitoring for Transaction Performance
June 2005
Use the management cycle in IBM Tivoli Monitoring for Transaction Performance to monitor a Web service deployed on WebSphere Business Integration Server Foundation 5.1.1 and gain the ability to manage your IT services as part of a business performance management capability.
Part 11: Build ESB connectivity with RSA WebSphere Platform Messaging Patterns
August 2005
Rapidly integrate and connect J2EE components to add Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) connectivity using WebSphere Platform Messaging Patterns support in Rational Software Architect. Discover how to generate EJB and Java artifacts and a JACL script for configuring the Service Integration Bus in WebSphere Application Server 6.0.
Part 12: Use DB2 Alphablox to generate reports for your business processes
August 2005
Use IBM DB2 Alphablox to generate reports showing historical data about your Business Process Execution Language (BPEL)-based business processes running on WebSphere Business Integration Server Foundation V5.1.1.
Part 13: Integrate BPEL with Enterprise Service Bus in WebSphere Application Server V6
October 2005
Integrate BPEL-based business processes with service providers using ESB capabilities in WebSphere Application Server V6.
Part 14: Build portlets using Rational Software Architect State Oriented Portlet Patterns
November 2005
Use Enterprise Patterns to quickly build Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) applications with IBM Rational Software Architect (RSA). RSA now supports IBM State Oriented Portlet Patterns that help you rapidly architect and generate a complete portlet application for IBM WebSphere Portal Server.
Part 15: Use IBM WebSphere Integration Developer to assemble components
December 2005
Get an introduction to the Eclipse-based WebSphere Business Integration Developer V6.0, which helps you develop and assemble applications targeted for IBM WebSphere Process Server V6.0. In this article, you develop and test simple modules using Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) processes, business rules, and existing Web services.
Part 16: Deliver IBM Tivoli System Automation configurations quickly using the Failover Configuration Pattern
January 2006
Use the Tivoli Failover Configuration Pattern Asset to simplify the configuration, development and deployment of high availability solutions. By visually modeling your configuration in Unified Modeling Language (UML), configuration scripts for Tivoli System Automation can be generated from the model.
Part 17: Build a Hello World SOA application
January 2006
Take a life cycle approach with SOA: model, assemble, deploy, and manage with enhanced products from IBM. In this article, you learn how to build an SOA Hello World application using these products.
Part 18: Use IBM WebSphere Integration Developer to assemble components
February 2006
Add human tasks, the steps in a workflow that require user action, to the insurance claim scenario and to a Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) process in this article. And find out how to fully exploit WebSphere Portal V5.1.0.3 business process integration capabilities.
Part 19: Integrate Workplace Business Strategy Execution and WebSphere Process Server
March 2006
Explore how to use IBM Workplace for Business Strategy Execution and IBM WebSphere Process Server together to monitor a business objective. Create and interpret objectives on a Workplace for Business Strategy Execution scorecard, and get the actual values from a business process running on WebSphere Process Server.
Part 20: Develop task-processing portlets with new tooling in IBM Rational Application Developer
May 2006
Discover the tooling capabilities of Rational Application Developer V6.0.1.1 and simplify the development of business-process portlets for business process integration with WebSphere Portal V5.1.0.3.
Part 21: Use J2EE Security and Event Patterns
June 2006
Use IBM Rational Software Architect with two J2EE security patterns that you can apply during your model-driven application development process. Explore how an event pattern can enable your applications to create and submit standards-based events, which can then be persisted or consumed by other services, and correlated for various purposes, such as problem determination and auditing.
Part 22: Define and deploy WebSphere clusters using Rational Software Architect WebSphere Cluster Creation Pattern
July 2006
Use the WebSphere Cluster Creation Pattern to quickly create Jython or Java Command Language (JACL) scripts to instantiate WebSphere clusters on WebSphere Application Server (Versions 5.x and 6.x) using Rational Software Architect.
IBM WebSphere Developer Technical Journal: Comment lines from Kyle Brown
Find out why you need WebSphere Extended Deployment.
April 2005
Download IBM product evaluation versions and get your hands on application development tools and middleware products from DB2®, Lotus®, Rational®, Tivoli®, and WebSphere®.
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