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@inproceedings{DuBoisOOIS03,
author = {Bart {Du Bois} and Serge Demeyer},
booktitle = {Proceedings {OOIS}'03 (Object-Oriented Information
Systems)},
editor = {Dimitri Konstantas and Michel Leonard and
Yves Pigneur and Shusma Patel},
note = {Acceptance ratio: 40/80 = 50\%},
pages = {152-163},
publisher = {Springer-{V}erlag},
series = {Lecture Notes on Computer Science},
title = {Accommodating Changing Requirements with {EJB}},
volume = {LNCS 2817},
year = {2003},
abstract = {Component Based Software Development promises to
lighten the task of web application developers by
providing a standard component architecture for
building distributed object oriented business
applications. Hard evidence consolidating this
promise has yet to be provided, especially knowing
that the standard libraries of today's programming
languages offer considerable support for distribution
(e.g. remote method invocations, database
interfaces). Therefore, this paper compares three
Java implementations of the same functionality - one
using straightforward library-calls, one using a
custom-made framework and one using the Enterprise
Java Beans framework (EJB) - to assess the
maintainability of each of the approaches. We
perceive that EJB results in better maintainability,
concluding that Component Based Software Development
is necessary for building websystems that will
continue to survive in the context of rapidly
changing requirements.},
annote = {internationalconference},
}