Brian D. Goodman

Brian D. Goodman is currently a Senior IT Architect for IBM’s On Demand Workplace, based out of New York, NY. He received a multi-disciplinary BA degree in Computer Science, Psychology and Graphic Design from Hampshire College, Amherst, MA. His interest centered on early childhood human computer interface design. Prior to his current position, Brian worked as a Staff Software Engineer in IBM’s Advanced Internet Technology Lab, Southbury, CT. Other professional experience includes commercial CBT development, multimedia production, graphic design and print. His current interests include emerging data architectures, caching strategies, service oriented architectures, message queuing, pub/sub, web services, social networking systems and peer-to-peer systems.

Publications

Collaborative Mediation: How the Power of Collaboration in Social Computing Demands Greater Thought Diversity
Brian Goodman. © 2012. 19 pages.
Individuals are the generators and consumers of content, and in doing so, make up a substantial presence in the literate internet, above and beyond the formal media outlets that...
Lowering the Center of Gravity around Enterprise IT
Amy C. Hutchins, Brian D. Goodman, John W. Rooney. © 2010. 17 pages.
In this chapter, we look at three key reasons why corporate development projects fail and how a technology and innovation management program can change a company’s approach to...
Approaches to Building High Performance Web Applications: A Practical Look at Availability, Reliability, and Performance
Brian Goodman, Maheshwar Inampudi, James Doran. © 2009. 32 pages.
In this chapter, we introduce five practices to help build scalable, resilient Web applications. In 2004, IBM launched its expertise location system, bringing together two legacy...
Approaches to Building High Performance Web Applications: A Practical Look at Availability, Reliability, and Performance
Brian Goodman, Maheshwar Inampudi, James Doran. © 2007. 35 pages.
In this chapter, we introduce five practices to help build scalable, resilient Web applications. In 2004, IBM launched its expertise location system, bringing together two legacy...
Peer-to-Peer Computing: The Evolution of a Disruptive Technology
Ramesh Subramanian, Brian D. Goodman. © 2005. 300 pages.
Peer to Peer Computing: The Evolution of Disruptive Technology takes a holistic approach to the affects P2P Computing has on a number a disciplines. Some of those areas covered...
Peer-to-Peer Corporate Resource Sharing and Distribution with Mesh
Ramesh Subramanian, Brian Goodman. © 2004. 22 pages.
Peer-to-peer (or “P2P”) computing has aggressively moved to the center-stage of the computing field in recent years. “P2P computing” emphasizes the shift away from centralized...