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InternetNews August 10, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Software Giants Ship Addressing Spec to W3C Microsoft, IBM, SAP, BEA and Sun Microsystems put aside differences to deliver WS-Addressing spec to the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). |
InternetNews December 9, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Microsoft, Sun Submit Web Services Drafts to W3C The move is part of the companies' deal to try and work together. |
InternetNews May 25, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun Heats Up Java Vendor Wars Java's creator rolls new Web services developer tools and new application server platform in a bid to tease market share from BEA and IBM. |
InternetNews March 5, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Microsoft, IBM Top Off Web Services Metadata Spec Data about data is key in a continuation of the roadmap for defining reliable, safe Web services delivery. |
JavaWorld September 2002 Frank Sommers |
I like your type: Describe and invoke Web services based on service type The Web Service Description Language (WSDL) provides an XML grammar for defining and advertising a Web service, including a service's type. This article gives an overview of how to describe a Web service with WSDL using Apache Axis tools and Java. |
InternetNews May 10, 2006 Clint Boulton |
W3C: WS-Addressing is Good to Go The World Wide Web Consortium ratified Web Services Addressing 1.0 as a standard, removing another stumbling block on the road to interoperability among distributed computing systems. |
JavaWorld October 3, 2003 Mitch Gitman |
Keep up with the Web service styles (and uses) While XML-transparent Web service development might sound like the easy way to go, understanding and manipulating XML in SOAP messages can actually avoid some development difficulties. |
CIO October 1, 2003 Christopher Koch |
The Battle for Web Services Everyone wants Web services standards. CEOs think the technology will create new opportunities. CFOs believe it will save millions. Vendors see a pot of gold at the end of the Web services rainbow. And CIOs know that linking to customers and partners over the Internet will revolutionize both business and IT. So what's the holdup? The usual suspects: Politics. Ego. Suspicion. Fear. Greed. |
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. |
InternetNews October 26, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
W3C Looks to GRDDL For Semantic Web Sense With the help of the in-development W3C GRDDL specification, the Semantic Web takes a step closer to becoming an implementable reality. |
InternetNews March 8, 2010 |
Top Spot at W3C Goes to Former Novell Exec Jeffrey Jaffe takes over as the World Wide Web Consortium's CEO as the chief Web standards body looks ahead. |
InternetNews July 30, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Standards Bodies to Give the Web Legs In a move to get more users to access the Web via mobile devices, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) have inked an agreement to collaborate on specifications. |
InternetNews January 25, 2008 Sean Michael Kerner |
HTML 5 Hits First Public Working Draft Much more remains to be done as the W3C continues its work on the next HTML standard. |
InternetNews May 14, 2010 |
W3C Issues XProc XML Pipeline Standard World Wide Web Consortium issues long-awaited XML pipeline standard dubbed XProc to enable interoperability across multiple XML documents. |
InternetNews February 15, 2005 Clint Boulton |
W3C to Break Web Language Barriers? The World Wide Web Consortium sinks its teeth into the dilemma of rendering the world's languages online. |
InternetNews March 30, 2011 |
W3C Investigates Convergence of Web and TV The web isn't just about your desktops and laptops anymore, but is HTML5 ready for TV? |