Real World Web Services
Integrating EBay, Google, Amazon, FedEx and more
By Will Iverson
October 2004
Pages: 222
ISBN 10: 0-596-00642-X |
ISBN 13: 9780596006426
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(3) (Average of 2 Customer Reviews)
The core idea behind Real World Web Services is simple: after years of hype, what are the major players really doing with web services? Standard bodies may wrangle and platform vendors may preach, but at the end of the day what are the technologies that are actually in use, and how can developers incorporate them into their own applications? Those are the answers Real World Web Services delivers. It's a field guide to the wild and wooly world of non-trivial deployed web services.
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Book details
First Edition: October 2004
ISBN: 0-596-00642-X
Pages: 222
Average Customer Reviews: ![]()
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(3) (Based on 2 Reviews)
Featured customer reviews
Does oreilly host all reviews or just good ones?, July 03 2006
Well i am impressed by the 100% Gaurantee. So i will definitely order this book. But was curious to see if all reviews are displayed or just the good ones..
If i see my comments here I am pretty sure this is a fair reviews.
Review of "Real World Web Services", March 20 2006
You would like to concretely jump into the web services movement but all you can find are the same old books with invariably repetitive and boring toy examples, such as the infamous StockQuote and Wheater web services. Don’t look any further and grab yourself a copy of this book. Will Iverson takes a significantly different approach and shows you how to build concrete web services applications by leveraging existing web services APIs provided by important industry actors, such as, Amazon, Google, eBay, Gracenote (CDDB), FedEx, PayPal, Interfax, etc.
What’s more, the author does not limit himself to presenting dry facts about how to work with those web services. Instead, he elegantly demonstrates how to compose them in order to create competitive analysis, list auctions and estimate shipping costs, integrate billing with faxing technologies, syndicate searches, aggregate news from different sources using Quartz and RSS, build a custom CD catalog, dig out and deliver hot news, automatically create daily discussions on Blogger and LiveJournal, and much more.
Basically, this book provides exactly what is often missing from other tomes while managing at the same time to stay extremely simple and straightforward, yet very complete and accurate. I would definitely advise it to any Java developer who is eager to start writing effective and working web services code.
More reviews on Val's blog (http://radio.javaranch.com/val)
Media reviews
"If you learn best by following example, code example that is, then you've really hit the jackpot here."
--Davey Winder, "PC Plus," March 2005
"This isn't a Dummies book -- it's from O'Reilly which means its for the professional webmaster who knows something more about programming than using a Front Page bot."
--Bruce Kratofil, Blogcritics.org, February 2005
"Strengths: An O'Reilly book.
Weaknesses: None Found.
These are real world applications using real web services. Simple, really. Easy when someone like Will Iverson."
--Robert Pritchett, MacCompanion, January 2005 (3:1)
"Basically, this book provides exactly what is often missing from other tomes while managing at the same time to stay extremely simple and straightforward, yet very complete and accurate. I would definitely advise it to any Java developer who is eager to start writing effective and working web services code."
Valentin Crettaz, JavaRanch.com, December 2004


