Mule-enabled
Integrate enterprise resources with the best-known open-source Java ESB. This is an introductory session with a brief summary of Mule internals: the goal is for the Mule-curious to walk away a with enough knowledge and techniques to develop Mule-based solutions. You'll have the right start to becoming a Mule development master.
We'll start out with a brief introduction to Mule components and its model for integration, then move quickly on to practical knowledge: creating Mule integration components (UMBs), deployment and system configuration, writing unit tests for your components, and managing integration tests for multi-component systems.
About Brian Maso
Brian is a long-time Java architect and real-world engineer, who can credibly wax nostagic about the JDK 1.0 beta days. In the decade since that release, Brian has worked mostly in and around places where web services and the Java VM reign. Clients have included: LeapFrog, Inc., GE Medical Systems, The Motor Cycle Council of America, Cardinal Health (Pyxis Corp. division), the U.S. Dept. of Defense, and many others.
Lately Brian has restricted his professional life to the bounds that his family of four children will allow, venturing away from coding and architecture work only to publish white papers, serve as an independent expert on the JSR 225 (XQJ) Expert Group, and of course share his astounding revelations to No Fluff Just Stuff symposium audiences.
Brian's specific interests include system integration through web services, ESBs and public service networks; and agile system- and unit-specification and testing.
In years past: Brian was the first Tips and Techniques Editor for the Java Developer's Journal; wrote four marginally useful technical books on Java and web development; was the first Java instructor for DevelopMentor, with whom he has delivered thousands of man-days of material to engineers across the maturity spectrum at companies and organizations across North America.
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