This week's book giveaway is in the Agile and other Processes forum. We're giving away four copies of The Mikado Method and have Ola Ellnestam and Daniel Brolund on-line! See this thread for details.
Until the just-released "Java Enterprise Best Practices" (Edited by Robert Eckstein, O'Reilly, $34.95 US), advanced Java developers relied on the advice of a loose-knit community of fellow developers, time-consuming online searches for examples or suggestions for the immediate problem they faced, and tedious trial-and-error. But Java has grown to include a huge number of APIs, classes, and methods. Now it is simply too large for even the most intrepid developer to know it all. The need for a written compendium of J2EE best practices has never been greater. "Java Enterprise Best Practices" focuses on the Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) APIs. The J2EE APIs include such alphabet soup acronyms as EJB, JDBC, RMI, XML, and JMX. To order your copy http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596003846/jr_bunk-20
Java Enterprise Best Practices By The O'Reilly Java Authors Edited by Robert Eckstein 0-596-00384-6, Order Number: 3846 288 pages, $34.95 US, $54.95 CA, 24.95 UK Celebrating 25 years of animal magnetism: Since 1978, O'Reilly has been searching out cool, useful, and paradigm-shattering technology, and spreading the word about it. Read Tim O'Reilly's reflections on our first 25 years, stroll along our anniversary time line, and share stories about your experiences with O'Reilly. http://www.oreilly.com/25anniversary/ ----------------------------------------------------------------- If you want to cancel a subscription to this newsletter, or add subscriptions to other topics, go to http://www.oreillynet.com/cs/user/home For non-automated human help email help@oreillynet.com ------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Thomas Paul: Until the just-released "Java Enterprise Best Practices" (Edited by Robert Eckstein, O'Reilly, $34.95 US), advanced Java developers relied on the advice of a loose-knit community of fellow developers, time-consuming online searches for examples or suggestions for the immediate problem they faced, and tedious trial-and-error.