The Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition is a sophisticated suite of enterprise APIs that enable you to write robust, scalable and multi-user software deployments.
Developing enterprise applications requires an understanding of many technologies. This course is designed to cover a multitude of concepts with the major parts of the Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) platform covered. The Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition is a sophisticated suite of enterprise APIs that enable you to write robust, scalable and multi-user software deployments.
Major topics covered:
- Java Database Connectivity (JDBC)
- Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI)
- Java Native Interface (JNI)
- Servlets
- Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB)
- Java Transaction API (JTA)
- Java Messaging Service (JMS)
- XML with Java
- JINI
JavaScript is incredibly versatile. You can start small, with carousels, image galleries, fluctuating layouts, and responses to button clicks. With more experience you’ll be able to create games, animated 2D and 3D graphics, comprehensive database-driven apps, and much more!
The course is about 60% lecture and 40% hands on exercises and labs
This course presents an overview of the Java programming language including applet programming as well as application development. In order to build a solid foundation for Java Development, an introduction to object-oriented programming is also presented. All major features of Java API are covered. The course is about 60% lecture and 40% hands on exercises and labs
By focusing on the differences between Java and C++, the student can learn Java quickly and effectively.
Java is becoming more and more popular as a serious application development tool. Java is object-oriented, is very similar to C++ syntactically, but is much easier to learn and use than C++. One of the biggest advantages to Java is portability. Graphical User Interface? No problem! With the Application Window Toolkit, you can develop cool interfaces that run on many platforms. Java can be used to develop applets that run in a web browser, or stand-alone applications. This course introduces Java to the student with a background in C++ programming. By focusing on the differences between Java and C++, the student can learn Java quickly and effectively.
A one-day workshop providing the definitions, concepts, and practices related to business intelligence and analytics. The session is designed to expose the participant to the basic tools and techniques for determining appropriate data, data collection, data normalization, data storage, and data access for business intelligence analysis.
Working with the client, examples can be provided to participants directly applicable to their organizational area.
This course teaches participants how to create custom toolbars & menus, as well as, templates in Excel.
Students will gain competency in customizing the Excel interface, using templates, using custom chart types, using workbook collaboration features, using workbook integration and XML features, creating and editing macros, controlling macro assignments and functionality, and troubleshooting macros.
Guided, step-by-step labs will provide opportunities to practice new skills.
We will create your Creative Economy Project Management blueprint based on what you will learn in this seminar. A blueprint that may just change the way your organization manages its world of work going forward.
Lean changed the world of manufacturing, but had a far greater impact beyond that.
Agile brought Lean Thinking to software development.
Scrum changed the world of IT.
But Project Management is largely stuck with old plan and control management approaches using task-based estimating in a top-down decision making environment. Even the Waterfall lifecycle is largely associated with the Project Management community, despite the fact that the PMBOK® Guide never suggested sequential project lifecycles. Many project managers still manage projects with the same industrial age thinking from an era long bygone.
It is time that we manage today’s Creative Economy with something that actually works.
It is time that we leave behind the old industrial age thinking from an era long gone.
It is time to move forward.
Creative Economy Project Management goes beyond the extremes of Gantt Charts on one side and a Happy Team Kumbaya on the other to meet the goals of the business.
This project management approach is lean and agile, yet predictable. It works for the entire project value stream and not just the software development domain. And it scales to the program and portfolio level, in IT and beyond.
This one-day workshop will cover the challenges, potential pitfalls, best practice recommendations, and lessons learned in leading virtual project teams.
With the ever-increasing outsourcing, off-shoring, and specialization efforts of today’s global business environment, virtual teams are becoming the norm of project teams. Virtual teams can be advantageous to any organization when coupled with proper communication and adequate control. The virtual team environment, however, can carry inherent disadvantages that must be successfully managed throughout the project life cycle.
This one-day workshop will cover the challenges, potential pitfalls, best practice recommendations, and lessons learned in leading virtual project teams. Participants will be introduced to the purported advantages and common constraints of the virtual team environment. This will be followed by discussion and application of better (and useful) practices to capitalize on the advantages while limiting the impact of communication and control constraints in the virtual project team setting.
This course is designed for business analysts, quality assurance specialists, project managers, and technical personnel that want to learn to create effective Use Cases and User Stories
This course presents a methodology for creating Use Cases and how they fit into the overall Requirements Package. It explains the differences between Use Cases and how they fit into the SDLC process for both Agile and Waterfall methodologies. Workshops are included to give students practice in developing both options.
This class is useful to any analyst that is responsible for gathering requirements and/or representing exiting or desired business processes.
This class provides an introduction to business analysis using standards based notation and methodology, specifically Use-Cases and Unified Modeling Language (UML) diagrams. This class is useful to any analyst that is responsible for gathering requirements and/or representing exiting or desired business processes. This course offers plenty of hands-on opportunities.