What Is JBoss? A Beginner’s Guide To Understanding jboss Application! JBoss is a selected group of society members who are a strong advocate of JBoss technologies under a program sponsored by Red Hat. It fosters the growth of individuals that promote adoption of JBoss Projects and/or JBoss Products and actively gives their deep technical expertise about it in the community, within their firm and their clients or partners. This could be done in discussions, blogs, screencasts, tweets, conversations, social media, white papers, articles, books, The JBoss Technology Evangelist is common actively developing, creating and producing technical marketing assets that drive the technological public to purchase or influence the purchase of Red Hat JBoss Middleware Integration commodities & services. The JBoss Technology Evangelist will try to focus efforts towards results that are extremely leveraged, but may also be asked to help in more specific efforts such as helping close a particular customer. The JBoss Technology Evangelist has significant technical sales enablement charge and also helps influence JBoss Middleware product management by privately reporting demands and possibilities got through landscape and customer communications. JBoss Application Server is a software/open-source Java EE-based application server. An important distinction for this class of software is that it not only implements a server that runs on Java, but it actually implements the Java EE part of Java. Because it is Java-based, the JBoss application server operates crossplatform: usable on any operating system that supports Java. JBoss AS was developed by JBoss, now a division of Red Hat. This course covers all the important administrative tasks that are required to administer this new version of JBoss AS. It starts with installation, architecture, and basic configuration and monitoring. It covers management using the new and expanded Web console, as well as the structure of the management model and how to use it via the admin CLI (Command Line Interface) and via scripting. It includes coverage of using the management tools to deploy and configure Web and Enterprise applications, data sources, JMS resources (topics, queues), as well as covering the configuration of the major subsystems, including the Web (HTTP), Web Services, Messaging (including the new Hornet Q based provider), Logging, and Security subsystems.