Happy 4th Birthday, XML! As part of XML-J's
ongoing celebration of
XML's 4th birthday
(actual date: February 4,
1998, the date of the
W3C's XML 1.0
specification), we asked:
What would be the best
birthday present anyone
could give to XML? Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 8,892 Replies: 1 |
Deploying Web Services on
WebSphere IBM is one of the most
dominant players in the
push for Web services.
It's therefore not
surprising that much of
the Web services work
done by the company has
been incorporated into
their flagship product -
the WebSphere Application... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 8,403 |
.NET Web Services: The
'Three I' Monster As readers of a magazine
focused on XML, it may
amuse many of you that
the world has suddenly
discovered what we've
known for almost six
years: XML is a massively
powerful metalanguage.
Nowhere is that proven
better than in the sudd... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 7,674 Replies: 1 |
XML - Beyond Transport The computing world is
now positioned to deliver
on its unmet promise of
lowering the cost of
doing business and
providing the enterprise
with easy access to
additional markets. The
computer industry finds
itself in the third of
t... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 6,856 |
Middle-Tier Data
Management XML databases are
different from
traditional databases,
and they require a new
set of features and
metrics for evaluating
them. In my last column
(XML-J, Vol. 3, issue 2)
I talked about native XML
database management
systems (XDB... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 8,531 |
ADO.NET & ASP.NET What is ADO.NET? It's the
successor to the Active
Data Object technology
used in classic ASP. What
is ASP.NET? It's the
successor to Active
Server Pages, Microsoft's
popular architecture for
writing server-side Web
applications. Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 8,533 |
A Pragmatic Convergence
of ebXML & Web Services The 18-month-old
Electronic Business XML
project ended officially
in Vienna this past May
11, 2001. ebXML was an
ambitious and
high-profile initiative
of two neutral industry
groups: OASIS and the
United Nations' Centre
for Trade ... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 5,486 |
XML Messaging with JAXM
Part 2 Part 1 of this article
looked at the JAXM API
and some of the
components you can use to
send messages
synchronously. But the
JAXM API offers more
features, such as the
ability to send and
receive messages
asynchronously. To make
... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 9,591 |
Got XSLT? Part 5 of 5 As a substitute for
handcrafting, most word
processing and desktop
publishing tools lack the
capability to produce the
detailed design and
sophistication that
normally accompany
high-end page layouts.
And companies, of course,
are... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 9,311 |
XML Without Wires Last month we focused on
the need for compression
when XML is transmitted
over a wireless network
(XML-J, Vol. 3, issue 3).
We also looked at the use
of XSLT to tailor a
single XML document for
display on multiple
wireless devices, ... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 7,481 |
XML! Woo-ha-ha-ha-ha! In case you haven't heard
of him, Wopr is a
military computer that
was prominently featured
in the movie Wargames. He
was tied into all of the
world's major networks,
which caused problems
since his primary purpose
(for some reason)... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 6,675 |
XML IDEs vs Classic IDEs:
Competition or Synergy During the past few
months I've seen several
discussions on the
validity of the term XML
developer. Does this
breed of developer exist
in today's computing
industry? Has XML matured
to a stage that it
warrants job descriptions
for... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 7,102 |
Got XML? A large part of business
application development
deals with abstracting
the software components
and services that enable
the implementation of
industry domain-specific
business processes into a
design environment that
is used to mod... Mar. 25, 2002 Reads: 8,334 |