COURSE # NTO-811
INTRODUCTION TO OBJECT-ORIENTED COMPUTING
Broad and comprehensive overview of object based computing, introducing such basic concepts and object based languages as UML and Java. The course discusses object computing in contexts ranging from databases to intranets.
The rapid and unprecedented growth of the Internet has ushered in a new era of computing. Geographically distributed computational processes, instruments and machinery can potentially interact, communicate and collaborate to achieve a common goal. Object based computing offers a paradigm with the potential to tame and master the complexity inherent in designing large distributed information systems. Class lectures are supplemented by examples and demonstrations of working code.
Applications and benefits:
You will benefit by enhancing your understanding of the :
- Object based information systems.
- Object databases.
- Distributed object computing
Who should attend:
This course offers a thorough introduction to object based computing covering the basic concepts of object based programming and the more advanced aspects such as CORBA and object databases. It is designed specifically for management and IT professionals, programmers, and network engineers who either design or manage software projects. A familiarity with computers and programming is a prerequisite for this course.
Course Outline:
- Object-Oriented Computing
- The OMG Object Model
- Interfaces, Classes and Objects
- Encapsulation, Inheritance and Polymorphism
- Reusability
- Overview of Java
- ActiveX Controls and Java Beans
- Object-Oriented modeling, analysis and design
- Modeling System Architecture
- The 4 + 1 System View
- Introduction to UML (Unified Modeling Language)
- Distributed Object Computing
- TCP/IP Networks, Enterprise Intranets
- Network & Client-Server Computing
- CORBA
- RMI
- DCOM
- The Java Database Connection (JDBC)
- Object Databases
About the Instructor
Dr. Indur B. Mandhyan is the Director of Information Technology at OEI. Currently he is Head of Advanced Networking and Distributed Computing at Sarnoff Corporation, Princeton, NJ. Previously, Dr. Mandhyan was a senior member of the research staff at NYNEX Technology Center in White Plains, NY, where he was responsible for the design and deployment of optimal algorithms and the information infrastructure necessary for the planning and provisioning of voice and data networks, such as SDH/SONET and Frame Relay and ATM. Prior to that, he was a senior researcher at Philips Research Laboratories, where he was engaged in the design and development of optimal algorithms for automation and communications. Dr. Mandhyan holds a BS and MS in computer science and a PhD in Mathematics from the University of Massachusetts. He has published over a dozen technical publications and has authored several patents.
Details:
Course: NOO-811 Duration: 3 Days FEE: $1,399 CEUs: 2.16
Please direct any additional inquiries regarding this course to Anita Hellstrom, Program Coordinator, by e-mail, FAX: (636) 273-4955 or TELEPHONE: (636) 273-9608.
Call toll free 1-800-683-7267 from anywhere in the Continental U.S. or CANADA.
Last modified June 23, 2004.