Central Florida Software Symposium
June 24 - 26, 2005 - Orlando, FL
Dion Almaer
CTO of Adigio
Dion Almaer is the founder and CTO of Adigio, Inc. He is an architect, mentor, pragmatic, and evangelist of technologies such as J2EE, JDO, AOP, and Groovy. He is the Editor-in-Chief of TheServerSide.com J2EE Community and enjoys working in the community. He is a member of the Java Community Process, where he participates on various expert groups.
Presentations
Give the DB a break!: Performance and Scalability
What do we really mean by "performance" and "scalability"? This talk gets into the meat of problems which cause our applications to degrade. We will focus on issues such as problems caused by the database being a bottleneck for our application, and see how we can architect our solutions to bypass the issues, resulting in a solid system which scales with the increased load.
Not only will we look at the factors, but I will delve into a couple of case studies to show how real world problems were solved!
What do we really mean by "performance" and "scalability"? This talk gets into the meat of problems which cause our applications to degrade. We will focus on issues such as problems caused by the database being a bottleneck for our application, and see how we can architect our solutions to bypass the issues, resulting in a solid system which scales with the increased load.
Not only will we look at the factors, but I will delve into a couple of case studies to show how real world problems were solved!
Rules Engines
Rules engines are powerful beasts which allow you to program in a way in which you specific rules and facts, rather than a linear set of instructions.
Learn about how you can use Rules Engines in Java development to take care of complicated problems.
Rules engines are powerful beasts which allow you to program in a way in which you specific rules and facts, rather than a linear set of instructions.
It takes awhile to get used to "Thinking in Rules", but it gives you immense power for particular logical problems. You pass control HOW the rules are applied to the rules engine, and just give it the information it needs to get the job done.
Rules based systems are often great solutions for enterprise problems, and are uniquely useful for building so-called ""business rules"". Now you have an external view of your business, and can change behaviour via the rules rather than hard coding your application.
Learn about the power of Rules based thinking in this talk, as we go through and show real examples of how it can help you out in your daily toil.
Enterprise AOP
Aspect-oriented programming (AOP) has become a hot topic for enterprise development, with recent news of support by IBM, JBoss, BEA, Oracle, Eclipse, and IntelliJ.
Behind the news headlines, however, are critical questions: How real is AOP for the enterprise? What problems can it solve today? How does it apply to enterprise applications? How can one make an informed decision about trying to use AOP? What is the best adoption strategy? What are the long term possibilities for AOP in the enterprise?
This sessions tries to tackle those questions.
Aspect-oriented programming (AOP) has become a hot topic for enterprise development, with recent news of support by IBM, JBoss, BEA, Oracle, Eclipse, and IntelliJ.
Behind the news headlines, however, are critical questions: How real is AOP for the enterprise? What problems can it solve today? How does it apply to enterprise applications? How can one make an informed decision about trying to use AOP? What is the best adoption strategy? What are the long term possibilities for AOP in the enterprise?
This session tackles these questions and show developers, architects, and technical managers how AOP can be used for enterprise Java application development. We provide a refresher of AOP concepts and show enterprise examples of how AOP works and where it can be beneficial, as well as discussing anti-patterns (i.e., how not to use AOP).
Examples discussed include error handling, policy enforcement, tracing, systems management with JMX, and more. The examples are implemented in the AspectJ programming language (a popular and seamless aspect-oriented extension to Java) and incorporate major J2EE technologies such as servlets, JSPs, and EJBs. We will also demonstrate using the AspectJ tools to work in an enterprise environment. At the end of the tutorial, participants will have a better understanding of both the potential and the pitfalls for applying AOP in a J2EE context. The tools used in the tutorial are all freely available as open source software, so participants will be able to use the techniques shown in their own projects.