Kyle Brown (computer scientist)

Kyle Brown (born October 20, 1967) is an American computer scientist at IBM, Durham, NC, USA, known for his work in software design pattern. He is an IBM Fellow.[1] He has published ten books, over 100 commercial articles and papers, and holds more than 25 patents.[2] He was the program chair for the 2002 Pattern Languages of Programs Conference[3] and is again the program chair for the 2018 Pattern Languages of Programs Conference.[4]

Books

Books he has written or co-written include:

  • Kyle Brown; Sherman Alpert; Bobby Woolf (February 1998). The Design Patterns Smalltalk Companion. ISBN 978-0-201-18462-4.
  • Kyle Brown; Gary Craig; Greg Hester; Jaime Niswonger; David Pitt (May 2001). Enterprise Java Programming with IBM WebSphere. ISBN 978-0-201-61617-0.
  • Gregor Hohpe; Bobby Woolf; Kyle Brown; Martin Fowler; Sean Neville; Michael J Rettig; Jonathan Simon (October 2003). Enterprise Integration Patterns. ISBN 978-0-321-20068-6.
  • Kyle Brown; Gary Craig; Greg Hester; Jaime Niswonger; David Pitt (December 2003). Enterprise Java Programming with IBM WebSphere (2nd Ed). ISBN 978-0-321-18579-2.
  • Jon Thomas; Matthew Young; Kyle Brown; Andrew Glover (October 2004). Java Testing Patterns. ISBN 978-1-884-84250-4.
  • Roland Barcia; Geoffrey Hambrick; Kyle Brown; Robert Peterson; Kulvir Singh Bhogal (May 2008). Persistence in the Enterprise: A Guide to Persistence Technologies. ISBN 978-0-131-58756-4.
  • Roland Barcia; Kyle Brown; Karl Bishop; Matthew Perrins (June 2014). Modern Web Development with IBM WebSphere: Developing, Deploying, and Managing Mobile and Multi-Platform Apps. ISBN 978-0-133-06703-3.
  • Moe Abdula; Roland Barcia; Kyle Brown; Ingo Averdunk; Ndu Emuchay (May 2018). The Cloud Adoption Playbook. ISBN 978-1-119-49181-1.
gollark: So Debian is nonfree because it says you can add a repository for nonfree stuff?
gollark: I've said it before, you know.
gollark: PotatOS was literally made because of Terrariola.
gollark: Well, deploying orbital laser strike on terra I guess.
gollark: Really, Terra? If it *allows* you to install nonfree stuff it's beehiveful?

References

  1. "2018 IBM Fellows", IBM. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
  2. "Google Patents", Google Patents. Retrieved 2019-01-20.
  3. "2002 PLoP", The Hillside Group. Retrieved 2018-04-14.
  4. "2018 PLoP", The Hillside Group. Retrieved 2018-04-14.
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