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JavaWorld August 2001 John Rommel |
Will Web services jump-start the software slump? Web services have been hyped as the "new" new thing -- the future of business and personal living. The certainty of change, driven by the business necessity to deliver faster, better, and cheaper services, is continually transforming the Internet. |
JavaWorld September 2001 James R. Borck |
Leaders of the Web services pack The technology industry is abuzz about Web services. It's unclear, however, how Web services will affect developer's work, especially at this early stage. With that in mind, how do the Web service offerings from four leaders -- Microsoft, HP, IBM, and Sun Microsystems -- stack up? |
JavaWorld May 2002 Eoin Lane |
Is WSDL the indispensable API? Many developers consider Web Services Description Language (WSDL) the new software design view. WSDL offers a verbose, ASCII, standard, and language-agnostic view of services offered to clients. WSDL also provides noninvasive future-proofing for existing applications and services and allows interoperability across the various programming paradigms, including CORBA, J2EE, and .Net. This article shows a service's WSDL view, then explains how you can generate client and service implementations for Java and C#. It finishes by discussing possible sources for initial WSDL view generation. |
Wall Street & Technology March 26, 2004 Ian Bruce |
JPMorgan, Schwab, Prove Web Services Is More Than Just Hype In October 2002, Wall Street & Technology ran a feature article titled, "Can Web Services Live Up to the Hype?" Just over a year later, the answer appears to be a resounding 'yes.' |
JavaWorld February 2002 Jeff Hanson |
Use Web services to integrate Web applications with EISs Web services expose business processes to bolster object-oriented and component-based programming with a services-based model. You can enhance your current programming model to support Web services by adding a service contract... |
CIO October 15, 2001 Eric Knorr |
Make Way for Web Services The Web services concept stands apart in its common sense. It's a simple idea: Enterprise applications should be broken down into reusable components called services, each one performing a distinct task. They're inevitable. Just ask the big guys... |
JavaWorld August 2002 Abraham Kang |
Enterprise application integration using J2EE Java represents an ideal language for EAI because it runs on most, if not all, operating systems and boasts good support from EAI tool vendors. In addition, J2EE provides the security, messaging, and reliability services required in EAI. |
InternetNews February 11, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Big Vendors Lobby for CORBA With Their Java IBM, HP and BEA are concerned an interoperability specification isn't getting its due on Java's newest platform. |
New Architect July 2002 Al Williams |
That's A Wrap Bridging legacy systems and the Web with SOAP. |
CRM July 2003 Martin Schneider |
Getting IT Together Integration is a four-letter word in the world of CRM, but it doesn't have to be. What follows are the real issues behind integrating CRM solutions with an enterprise's existing systems, and how to simplify what could otherwise grind CRM initiatives to a halt. |
JavaWorld December 2001 |
Sun adds Web services to J2EE The Java XML Pack adds capability for XML messaging and data binding, as well as remote procedure calls using SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol). |
Bio-IT World November 12, 2002 Salvatore Salamone |
Divide and Distribute Web services -- the hot new distributed computing architecture -- promise to help life science companies give their researchers, partners, and customers improved access to diverse applications and data. |
JavaWorld March 2001 Tarak Modi |
Clean up your wire protocol with SOAP, Part 1 SOAP is not just another buzzword. It is a powerful new application of vendor-agnostic technologies, such as XML, that can help take the world of distributed programming to new heights. This article, the first in a series of four, introduces you to the basics of SOAP... |