Happy 4th Birthday, XML! From Paul Prescod, an
independent implementer
of markup-based systems,
a vocal advocate and
critic of various
technologies, coauthor of
the XML Handbook, and an
invited expert in the
original XML
standardization process. Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 8,411 |
The Problem with
XML-Based Storage As Java and XML continue
as the de facto standard
for developing enterprise
applications, issues
arise in using these
technologies. For
example, the need to
store XML data, and the
criteria for selecting
the appropriate
repository... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 7,525 |
XML Development Have you ever been called
an XML developer or XML
programmer? While
processing XML in
programs has become a
common task for computer
programmers, XML is used
only in the context of
some other programming
language environment,
such... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 7,692 Replies: 1 |
XML Messaging with JAXM:
Part 1 of 2 I could begin this
article by expounding on
the many applications
that XML has found itself
in, but that would be
pointless. It's well
known that XML has found
more than a niche in a
variety of applications,
in all tiers of
applic... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 10,232 |
The World of Enterprise
Messaging Messaging has been a part
of computing from the
minute that computers
were enabled to persist
data across invocations
of process. It was
inescapable that before
long machines would be
leaving messages for
other computers, soon to
... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 8,357 |
XML Glue: An XML workflow
and integration layer for
telecommunication
providers There are a number of
skeletons in the closets
of today's
telecommunication service
providers. One of the
scariest is that most
service providers cannot
successfully deliver on
the promises they make as
service-level commitments
t... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 7,169 |
Trends in High Volume XML
Publishing Integrating efficient XML
publishing into
high-volume content
environments remains a
significant challenge.
Among the many real-world
barriers: the need to
convert quantities of
paper and other legacy
documents and to
integrate ea... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 7,963 |
Markup Is Madness I've been reading that
the first Web page went
online 10 years ago. I
remember what it was like
being involved with
software development at
that time. My initial
feeling was that using
markup in a browser was
less than optimal becau... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 5,691 |
XML Without Wires - Part
1 of 2 Wireless transmission is
becoming more and more
common for many document
types, and XML is no
exception. But XML itself
presents a number of
challenges to the
wireless medium. This
article, the first in a
two-part series,
describe... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 9,563 |
ANT: An Introduction by
Example A build tool that
provides a
platform-independent
alternative to shell
script-based build tools
like make. Developed
using Java classes and
based on XML, Ant
preserves the 'write
once, run anywhere' Java
motto. With Ant's
plet... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 9,957 |
A Client for Testing
Server-Side XML
Applications Almost every industry
today has B2B exchanges
that enable businesses to
improve the efficiency of
some process or
communication with
customers, partners, or
suppliers. The open and
public exchanges that
exist today will be
replace... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 7,968 |
Transforming XML
Documents into HTML The power and elegance of
XSLT - the Extensible
Stylesheet Language for
Transformations - stems
from its ability to
transform XML documents
into other output formats
like HTML, fulfilling one
of the original promises
of XML: separat... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 8,557 |
XML's Contribution to Web
Services Professional XML Web
Services isn't really an
XML book, but more a pure
Web services book. The
XML part is because XML
is used to represent Web
services (in the WSDL,
for example). The book
covers many types of Web
services, not jus... Feb. 22, 2002 Reads: 7,782 |