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Part Two of the book examines the life cycle of a RUP project in more detail. The four phases of a RUP project (inception, elaboration, construction and transition) area covered by separate chapters again using the example projects to aid comprehension.
Part Three is concerned with how to adopt the RUP within an organisation. This starts with a chapter on how to initially configure the RUP. As this chapter deals mainly with RUP software and tools, it was not that useful, as I do not have access to them. The next chapter (Chapter Eleven) is more useful and offers practical advice on how to actually adopt the process. All of the advice seems very sensible, adopt a little bit first, and perform a pilot project to evaluate what parts of RUP are required, all sensible stuff. Chapter Twelve deals with how to adopt an iterative project and is followed by a chapter of RUP anti-patterns.
The final part of the book offers a view on how RUP affects project managers, analysts, developers and testers; each role is the subject of a chapter. A good glossary (required for all the TLAs) and references then complete the book.
"The Rational Unified Process Made Easy" is subtitled as a practitioners guide and in essence that is exactly what it is. It offers a clear and concise introduction to the RUP and the toolset, augmented with good advice and examples. This book is suited to a developer/analyst or manager who will be using the RUP in the near future.