
The combination of web-enabled tools, Java and ActiveX components, makes intranet/extranet application development a real possibility for normal, commercial shops. The Intranet/Extranet Developers Conference uses a combination of top consultants, independent developers and vendor architects to explain the architectures, standards, and approaches to building these applications. If you plan to make your living building intranet/extranet applications, you can’t afford to miss this conference.
Most applications being built and deployed today, and in the next few years, will be principally based on the client/server paradigm. This conference considers the application development issues and wide world of application packages for both front and back office environments. Architectures and applications for both fat and thin clients are discussed, as are issues of integration with relational, object, and universal DBMS servers. Important topics such as how to best use components and how to build and maintain a flexible architecture are presented. If you want fair, unbiased advice and experience for client/server development and packages, this is the conference for you.
Like it or not, your enterprise is committed to Data Warehousing and you had better be well on your way to planning for, building or rolling out the Data Warehouse strategy that will ensure your competitive survival into the 21st century. Virtually every enterprise will be forced to compete based on its ability to offer users the most powerful yet flexible analytical tools. This conference offers a unique opportunity for you to meet face-to-face with the early adopters, mainstream users, leading vendors and systems integrators who are actually working with state-of-the-art data warehousing technologies.
Application paradigms have moved from host-centric to client/server, to event-driven, to intranet-based. As a designer and application developer, your data and object modeling tools and approaches have to evolve - mightily - to keep current with these paradigm changes. This conference covers the key issues of the integration of object and relational technology, as well as the need for and best use of business rules. Understand the latest techniques in database design, the benefits of business rules implementation, and the future of object-relational technology.
With the rise of the Internet and the integration of CORBA, OpenDoc, and Java technology into the Internet, most companies are now set to embrace the distributed object approach. The Distributed Objects and Middleware Conference emphasizes the opportunities and problems faced by companies as they begin to move from modest client/server systems to enterprise-wide distributed object systems. We explore the various options that companies face as they consider CORBA system and technologies like OpenDoc and JavaBeans. This conference also focuses on the state of middleware technology, and the practical usage of middleware in building an applications integration framework.
Time is running out! Most large organizations are aware that the turn-of-the-century will pose unique problems for technology organizations around the world. What they don’t understand is just exactly how big this problem is and how late they are in getting started! Discover exactly what it will take to develop a Y2000 survival strategy, including risk management, vendor evaluation, tool selection, and testing, Don’t wait for the ball to drop addressing the problem of the transition across the century date change now could save your organization millions of dollars!
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