BizTalk : implementing business-to-business e-commerce /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Kobielus, James G.
Imprint:Upper Saddle River, NJ : Prentice Hall, [c2001]
Description:xxi, 441 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Language:English
Series:Prentice Hall series PTR on Microsoft technologies
Prentice Hall PTR Microsoft technologies series.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/4463490
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0130891592 (pbk.)
Notes:Includes index.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface: What Makes an Electronic Marketplace Tick?
  • Foreword
  • About the Author
  • Part 1. Biztalk Fundamentals
  • 1. What Is BizTalk?
  • 1.1. BizTalk, EDI, and Workflow
  • 1.2. Microsoft as BizTalk Evangelist
  • 1.3. BizTalk as Microsoft Strategic E-Commerce Initiative
  • 1.3.1. BizTalk the Brand: Microsoft as Usual
  • 1.3.2. BizTalk the Philosophy: A New Microsoft?
  • 1.4. BizTalk as E-Commerce Interoperability Standards
  • 1.4.1. BizTalk Application Model
  • 1.4.2. BizTalk Schemas
  • 1.4.3. BizTalk Documents
  • 1.4.4. BizTalk Messages
  • 1.4.5. BizTalk Workflows
  • 1.4.6. BizTalk Event Model
  • 1.5. BizTalk as E-Commerce Industry Coalition, Schema Repository, and Developer Community
  • 1.5.1. BizTalk Steering Committee
  • 1.5.2. Online Schema Repository
  • 1.5.3. Developer Community
  • 1.6. BizTalk as B2B E-Commerce Products and Services
  • 2. How Does BizTalk Differ From Other E-Commerce Frameworks?
  • 2.1. B2B Functional Reference Model
  • 2.2. BizTalk and the B2B Reference Model
  • 2.3. Ariba's Commerce XML (cXML)
  • 2.4. Open Buying on the Internet
  • 2.5. Open Trading Protocol
  • 2.6. XML Electronic Data Interchange (XML/EDI) Group
  • 2.7. Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards
  • 2.8. Common Business Library
  • 2.9. Vertical-Market E-Commerce Frameworks
  • 2.9.1. Information and Content Exchange
  • 2.9.2. RosettaNet
  • 2.9.3. Open Applications Group Integration Specification
  • 2.10. Synergies Between BizTalk and Other B2B Frameworks
  • 3. What Are the Fundamental Technologies Behind BizTalk?
  • 3.1. Electronic Data Interchange
  • 3.1.1. Transaction Sets
  • 3.1.2. Transmission, Storage, and Forwarding
  • 3.1.3. Message Addressing
  • 3.1.4. Mapping and Translation
  • 3.1.5. Security
  • 3.1.6. Directory
  • 3.1.7. Archiving
  • 3.1.8. Auditing
  • 3.1.9. EDI and the B2B Reference Model
  • 3.2. Workflow
  • 3.2.1. Process Definition Tools
  • 3.2.2. Workflow Enactment Services
  • 3.2.3. Workflow Client Applications
  • 3.2.4. Invoked Applications
  • 3.2.5. Administration and Monitoring Tools
  • 3.2.6. Workflow and the B2B Reference Model
  • 3.3. Where EDI and Workflow Converge
  • 4. Who's Supporting and Implementing BizTalk?
  • 4.1. Who's on the BizTalk Steering Committee?
  • 4.2. Who's Announced General Support for the BizTalk Initiative?
  • 4.3. Who's Posting Schemas to BizTalk.org?
  • 4.4. Who's Announced BizTalk-Compliant Solutions?
  • 4.5. Which Users Are Candidates for Migration to BizTalk Server?
  • 5. How Open Is the BizTalk Framework?
  • 5.1. Microsoft's Familiar Approach to Implementing Open Standards
  • 5.2. What Does "Open" Mean Anyway?
  • 5.3. How Does the BizTalk Initiative Measure Against These Criteria of "Openness"?
  • 5.3.1. Is It Described Fully in Publicly Available Documents?
  • 5.3.2. Is It Flexible and Extensible?
  • 5.3.3. Is It Independent of Any One Operating Environment, Network Protocol, Database, or Programming Language?
  • 5.3.4. Is It Available as Open-Source Royalty-Free Distributions to All Interested Parties?
  • 5.3.5. Is It Dominated or Unduly Influenced by One Vendor?
  • 5.3.6. Is It Managed by an Industry Group that Does Not Impose Unreasonable or Unfair Restrictions on Membership?
  • 5.3.7. Is It Managed by a Group that Does Not Conduct Business or Develop Specifications in Closed Working Environments?
  • 5.3.8. Is It Managed by a Group that Publishes Full, Regular Updates on Their Activities?
  • 5.4. Summary
  • Part 2. Biztalk Applications
  • 6. Hubbed Marketplace Integration
  • 6.1. Potential BizTalk Role in Hubbed E-Marketplaces
  • 6.2. E-Marketecture Reference Model
  • 6.3. Hosting Model
  • 6.3.1. Broker-Hosted E-Marketplaces
  • 6.3.2. Seller-Hosted E-Marketplaces
  • 6.3.3. Buyer-Hosted E-Marketplaces
  • 6.3.4. Industry-Hosted E-Marketplaces
  • 6.4. Membership Model
  • 6.4.1. Private Marketplaces
  • 6.4.2. Vertical Marketplaces
  • 6.4.3. Horizontal Marketplaces
  • 6.5. Aggregation Model
  • 6.5.1. Content-Aggregation Paradigms
  • 6.5.2. Content-Disaggregation Paradigms
  • 6.6. Transaction Model
  • 6.6.1. Commercial Contracts
  • 6.6.2. Bargaining Mechanisms
  • 6.6.3. Transactional Workflows
  • 6.7. Pricing Model
  • 6.7.1. Forward Auctions
  • 6.7.2. Reverse Auctions
  • 6.7.3. Double Auctions
  • 6.8. Payment Model
  • 6.8.1. Internet-Based Account-Consolidation Services
  • 6.8.2. Internet-Based Payment-Processing Services
  • 6.8.3. Internet-Based Financial Institutions
  • 6.8.4. Internet-Based Proxy Currencies
  • 6.9. Facilitation Model
  • 7. Extranet Supply-Chain Integration
  • 7.1. Potential BizTalk Role in Extranet Supply Chain
  • 7.2. Extranets and the E-Marketecture Reference Model
  • 7.3. Extranet Hosting Model
  • 7.4. Extranet Membership Model
  • 7.4.1. Authentication
  • 7.4.2. Authorization
  • 7.4.3. Content Confidentiality
  • 7.4.4. Content Integrity
  • 7.4.5. Nonrepudiation
  • 7.5. Extranet Aggregation Model
  • 7.6. Extranet Transaction Model
  • 7.6.1. Commercial Contracts
  • 7.6.2. Bargaining Mechanisms
  • 7.6.3. Transactional Workflows
  • 7.7. Extranet Pricing Model
  • 7.8. Extranet Payment Model
  • 7.9. Extranet Facilitation Model
  • 8. Enterprise Application Integration
  • 8.1. Potential BizTalk Role in Enterprise Application Integration
  • 8.2. EAI and the E-Marketecture Reference Model
  • 8.3. Markup Languages
  • 8.4. Development Interfaces
  • 8.4.1. Partitioning
  • 8.4.2. Jazzing
  • 8.4.3. Componentizing
  • 8.5. Object Technologies
  • 8.5.1. CORBA
  • 8.5.2. COM/DCOM
  • 8.6. Connector Technologies
  • 8.7. Transaction Technologies
  • 8.7.1. Distibuted Transaction Processing Monitors
  • 8.7.2. Message Brokers
  • Part 3. BizTalk Products and Services
  • 9. Microsoft BizTalk Server 2000
  • 9.1. BizTalk Server's Role in Microsoft's Application Server Family
  • 9.2. Application Integration
  • 9.2.1. Remote Application Interfaces
  • 9.2.2. Schema Editing and Mapping
  • 9.2.3. Business Process Policy Definition and Management
  • 9.3. Content Processing
  • 9.3.1. Content-Processing Components
  • 9.3.2. Content-Processing Steps
  • 9.3.3. Routing Options
  • 9.4. Service Management
  • 9.4.1. Single-Site Single-Server Deployment
  • 9.4.2. Single-Site Multi-Server Deployment
  • 9.4.3. Multi-Site Multi-Server Deployment
  • 9.5. Summary
  • 10. Microsoft Commerce Server 2000
  • 10.1. Commerce Server 2000's Role in Microsoft's Application Server Family
  • 10.2. User Management
  • 10.3. Campaign Management
  • 10.4. Catalog Management
  • 10.5. Order Management
  • 10.6. Operational Data Analysis
  • 10.7. Summary
  • 11. Other Microsoft Commerce-Related Products and Services
  • 11.1. SQL Server 2000
  • 11.2. Host Integration Server 2000
  • 11.2.1. Network Integration Services
  • 11.2.2. Security Integration Services
  • 11.2.3. Data Integration Services
  • 11.2.4. Transaction Integration Services
  • 11.3. Application Center 2000
  • 11.4. MSN E-Marketplace Services
  • 11.5. Summary
  • Part 4. BizTalk Technologies
  • 12. Microsoft E-Commerce Operating Environment
  • 12.1. Windows Distributed interNetworking Architecture
  • 12.1.1. Presentation Tier
  • 12.1.2. Business Logic Tier
  • 12.1.3. Data Tier
  • 12.2. Windows 2000
  • 12.3. Core Windows 2000 System Services
  • 12.3.1. Windows 2000 File Services
  • 12.3.2. Windows 2000 Directory Services
  • 12.3.3. Windows 2000 Security Services
  • 12.3.4. Windows 2000 Management Services
  • 12.4. Summary
  • 13. Microsoft E-Commerce Markup Technologies
  • 13.1. What's XML?
  • 13.1.1. Core Standard: XML 1.0
  • 13.1.2. XML Supplementary Core Standards and Specifications
  • 13.2. What is XML's Role in Microsoft's Products?
  • 13.2.1. Windows 2000
  • 13.2.2. Windows DNA 2000 Application Servers
  • 13.2.3. Application Development Tools and Sites
  • 13.2.4. Middleware Technologies
  • 13.2.5. Client Applications
  • 13.3. Summary
  • 14. Microsoft E-Commerce Application Development and Middleware Technologies
  • 14.1. Development Tools
  • 14.2. Object Computing Framework
  • 14.3. Object Brokering Framework
  • 14.4. Message Brokering Framework
  • 14.5. XML-Based Remote Procedure Calls
  • 14.6. Data Access Components, Providers, and Drivers
  • 14.7. Middleware, BizTalk-Hubbed E-Marketectures, and the Future of E-Commerce
  • Afterword: BizTalk and the Buzz of the Modern Economy
  • Glossary
  • Index