oracle 054课程ppt
英文的,配合其他教材如dba2day等一起使用会好一点
Christopher M. Bishop Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning
Moving from theory to practice. Applying the key principles of business-driven development across the software and systems delivery lifecycle. Doug T. Ishigaki, solution architect, Rational software, IBM Software Group Per Kroll, chief architect, expertise development and innovation, Rational software, IBM Software Group Bruce MacIsaac, manager of methods, Rational software, IBM Software Group
Ramp up development projects more quickly with reusable methods and processes. Per Kroll, chief architect, Rational expertise development and innovation, Rational software, IBM Software Group Bruce MacIsaac, manager of methods, Rational expertise development and innovation, Rational software, IBM Software Group
The Measured Capability Improvement Framework: a systematic approach to software delivery excellence. Per Kroll, chief architect, expertise development and innovation, Rational software, IBM Software Group
1. The Byzantine Generals Problem (1982) by Leslie Lamport, Robert Shostak and Marshall Pease 2. Go To statements considered harmfull (1968) - by Edsger W. Dijkstra 3. A Note on Distributed Computing (1994) - by Samuel C. Kendall, Jim Waldo, Ann Wollrath and Geoff Wyant 4. Big Ball of Mud (1999) - Brian Foote and Joseph Yoder 5. No Silver Bullet Essence and Accidents of Software Engineering (1987) - Frederick P. Brooks 6. The Open Closed Principle (1996) - Robert C. Martin (Uncle Bob) 7. IEEE1471-2000 A recommended practice for architectural description of software intensive systems (2000) 8. Harvest, Yield, and Scalable Tolerant Systems (1999) Armando Fox, Eric A. Brewer 9. An Introduction to Software Architecture (1993) - David Garlan and Mary Shaw 10. Who Needs an Architect? (2003) Martin Fowler
1. On the criteria to be used in decomposing systems into modules – David Parnas 2. A Note On Distributed Computing – Jim Waldo, Geoff Wyant, Ann Wollrath, Sam Kendall 3. The Next 700 Programming Languages – P. J. Landin 4. Can Programming Be Liberated from the von Neumann Style? – John Backus 5. Reflections on Trusting Trust – Ken Thompson 6. Lisp: Good News, Bad News, How to Win Big – Richard Gabriel 7. An experimental evaluation of the assumption of independence in multiversion programming – John Knight and Nancy Leveson 8. Arguments and Results – James Noble 9. A Laboratory For Teaching Object-Oriented Thinking – Kent Beck, Ward Cunningham 10. Programming as an Experience: the inspiration for Self – David Ungar, Randall B. Smith