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The ACCU passes on review copies of computer books to its members for them to review. The result is a large, high quality collection of book reviews by programmers, for programmers. Currently there are 1949 reviews in the database and more every month.
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Title:
Building J2EE Applications with the Rational Unified Process
Author:
Peter Eeles et al.
ISBN:
0-201-79166-8
Publisher:
Addison-Wesley
Pages:
265
Price:
£30-99
Reviewer:
Fazl Rahman
Subject:
java; internet
Appeared in:
16-4
I became sceptical early on reading overflowing praises in the foreword and preface, but my major gripe must be the chapter titles being unnecessarily repeated in full at every reference. Halfway into the book it chafed, though others may disagree. (Typesetting/binding is good though.) Another gripe: I found myself scratching my head a lot at such things "Design subsystems" and "Design packages" being used in the same breath, and needed the appendices often to look up their distinction.

Cutting to the chase: Chapter 2 gives a concise and useful introduction to J2EE. The waffle starts to creep in at Chapter 3 introducing RUP, then I found it progressively harder to pay attention until chapter 6 on Requirements where I liked the material on reviewing and getting user sign-off on requirements 'artifacts' [sic], also something I've rarely seen mentioned in use-case modelling treatments. (The authors provide a nice checklist of items such a review should cover on p 84.)

The section on User Experience Modelling (in Chapter 7) is a gem - an insightful exploration of the GUI within a Use Case based UML model, going beyond just labelling GUI classes with the boundary class UML stereotype.

Overall though, after the glowing enthusiasm in the forewords etc (by more than one person) I felt disappointed. Frankly I had to force myself to revisit this book. If I was working on a J2EE project using RUP, I'd probably be happy spending under£25 and (force myself to) read it again.