Mastering IBM WebSphere Portal: Expert Guidance to Build and Deploy Portal Applications | 
| Authors: Ron Ben-natan, Richard Gornitsky, Tim Hanis, Ori Sasson Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
List Price: $45.00 Buy New: $3.00 You Save: $42.00 (93%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 200876
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 552 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.2 x 1.3
ISBN: 0764539914 Dewey Decimal Number: 025.04 UPC: 785555868724 EAN: 9780764539916
Publication Date: June 25, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Maximize on the power of WebSphere Portal to build and deploy portals If you use, develop, manage, or administer WebSphere applications, you are probably already building or managing Web portals–or well on your way to doing so. With this comprehensive book, you’ll discover how these portals bring together important functions such as integration, presentation, organization, and customizations–functions needed in every complex application environment. The unparalleled author team of experts offers you in-depth insight on mastering the complex aspects of WebSphere Portal, walking you through every facet from installing to deployment. Mastering IBM WebSphere Portal focuses on not only the portal as a server, but also how it interacts with components such as LDAP servers, enterprise applications, mobile devices, and even other portals. The authors begin with an introduction to the WebSphere product family and then explore such topics as: - Installing and customizing the portal, as well as migrating existing environments to version 5
- Defining portlets, pages, and user interface properties
- Applying personalization, collaboration, search, and document and content management within WebSphere Portal v. 5
- Using high availability, security and single sign-on, identity management, Web services, and enterprise applications
- Setting up a portal in a high-availability environment and integrating external applications into WebSphere Portal
The companion Web site, www.wiley.com/compbooks/ben-natan, presents all the code in the book as well as links to vendors and sources of information pertaining to WebSphere Portal.
Download Description Portals represent a booming IT market, and enterprises that build portals are making six-figure-plus investments in software, creating a huge demand for information on these products IBMs WebSphere Portal more than doubled its market share from 2000 to 2001, making it the current leader in this field Addresses the full life cycle of portals, touching upon all issues that users will encounter in a real enterprise environment Each chapter features sample code and detailed, step-by-step instructions for all procedures, addressing the latest software release Ron Ben-Natan is a leading expert on WebSphere and has written several books and articles on the subject Companion Web site offers additional information and sample code
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Actually, Better Than Average May 11, 2007 This book is intended for four audiences: portal developers who will be working with WebSphere Portal Server, portal administrators, portal implementation specialists, and enterprise architects. Since I am a business analyst doing QA on a WebSphere Portal implementation project, I have skipped most of the instructions on how to install, how to access functions, etc. I'll leave that for others to review.
I find the book valuable as a way to understand portals in general and WebSphere Portal in particular. For me, the chapters on LDAP and mobile rendering were the most useful.
But the book is irritating, too. For example, there are lots of definitions of key concepts: very valuable. But they're scattered throughout the text: no glossary. Sometimes one of the authors will refer to the "user," and it's unclear whether he's referring to the end user of the portal or to the content creator: both are WebSphere users. Also, there's a good bit of Web Services in WebSphere, but no real "under the hood" discussion that might help the reader place WPS in clear relation to service-oriented architecture (SOA).
Much of my irritation stems from the editing. (I've worked many years as a technical editor.) At least two of the authors are speakers of English as a foreign language. Nothing wrong with that--if they get good copy editing. But Wiley has outsourced the copy editing. Different editors work on different chapters, they're probably in different countries, and their employer hasn't set down (or just not enforced) editorial guidelines and standards. As a result, we readers aren't getting the quality we deserve.
Use a redbook instead April 22, 2006 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This book doesn't even come close to its title. While there is some useful information, it appears to be obvious that this book was slapped together in a rush. Chapter 18 ends abruptly. Chapters 19, 20 don't even exist - in fact based on the table of contents pages 354-403 are missing.
And don't bother trying to find these pages on the "companion" book site. They don't exist there. You have to beg the publisher to get a copy.
Honestly, not worth the time - try downloading a free IBM Redbook instead.
No Depth. October 25, 2005 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
The contents of this book would better be found in technical documents such as user guides, architecture guides, and admin guides. That some reviewers report that this may be the only place to find some of this information says more about the paucity of good IBM documentation (or perhaps just the poor organisation of the IBM portal support site) than about the quality of the book.
This book is fairly limited to the "To save your data, click 'save'" brand of instructions (I thought Microsoft owned the patent on this technique?). Since many many portal configuration pages are self-explanatory, much of this instruction is wasted. And aside from a brief foray into Portlet development, which is a not-too-bad treatment for a neophyte, there is nothing for a developer.
Finally, the name is misleading. Certainly, there is nothing in this book that could possibly lead to "mastery" of the IBM WebSphere Portal.
Don't waste your money.
Best portal book April 30, 2005 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Best book for learning WebSphere portal (and I have them all). The redbook is also useful but this book is the first one you should read.
This is a must-have for WebSphere Portal teams April 13, 2005 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This book is packed full of clear and concise definitions of how WebSphere Portal works, along with step-by-step tutorials that fianlly put everything in one place. If you need to install, configure, design, develop, debug, troubleshoot and rollout a Portal 5.0.2 environment, this is an essential tool.
My personal book is annotated, dog-eared and full of sticky notes, and has proven an invluable asset.
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