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Paperback Web Site Engineering: Beyond Web Page Design Book

ISBN: 0136509207

ISBN13: 9780136509202

Web Site Engineering: Beyond Web Page Design

Addresses the management and technical issues that arise when Web sites move from brochureware to sophisticated application deployment platforms. This book builds on various software engineering... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Simply methodically enlightening!

Crucial or essential reading for web site designers and software engineers who are into web development. You can even consider keeping it as your primary reference book for years to come until the latest edition is out. Perhaps, earn itself a classic tag for people like me who collects great books. Web Site Engineering: Beyond Web Page Design by Thomas A. Powell (Author), et al dissects the fundamentals of web design using software engineering perspective or context. I love the way it applies the concepts of software engineering into web site design. No doubt I would purchase one. How about you?

Really about Web Site Life Cycle Management & Sys Eng.

I got this book to update my professional skills. My technical specialties are service delivery and production support, and my background is in traditional data center environments. With more than 25 years of mainframe and distributed computing I felt that I had better get up-to-date or I'd be left behind.Based on the title I was expecting a book that would give me insights into how web sites are developed with an emphasis on capacity and performance planning. Although this wasn't exactly what I was looking for it seemed to be close enough to give a basis for extrapolating what I needed. As it turned out, the book provided me with exactly what I needed: a clear view into web site development and deployment that is framed in a life cycle structure. It starts out with an overview of software engineering principles (not development techniques) and quickly emphasizes the need for process models. This is followed by some basics about the web, networking and how the web works. This is pretty fundamental stuff that can be safely skipped by experienced web developers who are interested in the process. Since I am not a developer and relatively new to the technology I liked this section.The [system] engineering process begins in chapter 4, and follows a standard life cycle model for the remainder of the book. Problem definition, concept exploration and feasibility analysis are given standard treatment - this is systems analysis 101 material, but is thoroughly covered and a good refresher. The same holds true for the chapter on requirements analysis and specification. When you arrive at chapter 6, Designing the Web Site, the unique requirements of web design are highlighted and the book becomes very interesting. I like the way application and information are distinguished, and the emphasis placed on usability. This is a marked departure from how systems were developed during the early days in my career when the user interface and human factors were an afterthought - if they were thought of at all.Chapter 7 is the only place in the book where any "web engineering" is addressed. I personally learned a lot from the discussions of client- and server-side technologies, tools and content management. However, an experienced web developer might find this material to be lightweight. The rest of the book placed implementation, testing, promotion into production and ongoing management into a familiar context that faithfully follows traditional life cycle and production support methods. I was gratified to see the emphasis on testing, release and post-implementation management because I do not see these in practice when it comes to web implementations. My view of web development and implementation prior to reading this book was that it is performed by extremely bright-but undisciplined-men and women who did not understand processes. This is based on personal observations of web projects - the projects all seemed to end after development and "thrown over the

Very good treatment of the web design/development process

This is an excellent book for web *developers* as well as web *designers*, since everyone working on web sites can benefit from understanding the larger process of web site design. If a person is looking for information on navigation devices, graphic accents, and the like, they might be disappointed here. However, if a person wants to learn the process of planning, building, testing, and launching a good solid web site, this book delivers.Many people, myself included, have experience with so-called "vanity" sites - small to medium-small web sites that contain pictures of their family, writings by them or by family members, a genealogical record, or a miniature e-zine. Building larger web sites, especially in a professional setting, takes more planning than simply brainstorming at the computer (something that often works for vanity sites). Learning where to test a site, what to do in terms of planning the site, and the flow from one step in the process to the next is a part of a web developer's education that is sometimes overlooked (or people assume that you'll osmose this information while you're on the job).The book describes the process in enough detail so that the reader clearly understands what happens at each stage, but not in so much detail that the reader is overwhelmed or the information is obscured. This is also one of the few books I have found to describe the entire process of web design and development instead of isolated bits and pieces, such as the coding, the graphics, the copy, the layout, or the back-end functionality. Don't be afraid to read this book if you're just learning to use FrontPage, or if you are only building web sites for fun right now - the overall process transfers over even if you are designing your first web site. (This will also give you an edge once you hit the professional market, since many people know how to do one little part of the web site but not many realise how to work with and plan for the other parts.)

Better than the title sounds

Powell's book is actually one of the best overviews I have read on Web development. While most books talk about visual design issue only he talks about the whole process pretty well. I think this is the book that David Siegels' Secrets of Successful Web Sites tried to be, but unfortunately that one focused instead on case studies and less on theory and general practice. This one's worth taking a look if only to understand how to run a Web project well.

Excellent departure from the 'Build a Kewl Web Site' books

Jones, et al, do an excellent job outlining the arguments for applying a systems design methodolgy to web site development. The book sets out to outline how that methodology can be applied to web site design and what that means in regards to more "traditional" design methodologies. This is a great overview of the process and more of a high-level overview than an actual nuts-and-bolts guide.
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