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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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
New Architect
July 2002
Al Williams
That's A Wrap Bridging legacy systems and the Web with SOAP. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 2001
Sonal Bansal & Gaurav Pal
The Web at your (machine's) service This article provides a practical Web service implementation based on the Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP), Universal Description Discovery and Integration (UDDI), and Web Services Description Language (WSDL) for delivering SMS messages to cellular phones... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
January 2002
Frank Sommers
A birds-eye view of Web services The author defines Web services, explains how they operate, and compares them to related Java technologies. He also presents a general programming model for Web services, independent of any framework or technology... mark for My Articles similar articles
New Architect
November 2002
Amit Asaravala
Can Public Web Services Work? Services, SOAP, and the survival of the fittest mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 2002
Joe Walker
XML glossary With XML evolving at a rapid pace, many developers get lost in a sea of acronyms. This article defines many XML technologies crucial to Java developers mark for My Articles similar articles
New Architect
April 2002
Lincoln D. Stein
A Service-Based Web Economy Web services will transform the Internet economy, leading to new business models, software distribution schemes, efficiencies of scale, reduced time to market, and increased return on investment... mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
November 19, 2004
Chris Dwan
Bridging Gaps with Web Services Web services provide a middle ground between the command line and the Web. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
March 23, 2004
Clint Boulton
Cape Clear Crafts SOA Tool One Web services management software vendor looks to lure developers with a free tool for building Web services based on service-oriented architecture. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 12, 2003
Frank Sommers
SAAJ: No strings attached The author shows how the SOAP with Attachments API for Java (SAAJ) 1.2 supports creating, parsing, and sending SOAP messages with binary content. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
January 2002
Tarak Modi
Axis: The next generation of Apache SOAP Apache SOAP has evolved to the point of its own extinction. Apache's Axis project is a complete re-architecture of its SOAP implementation and has many new features previously unheard of in Apache SOAP. Here's a high-level look at how Axis takes Apache SOAP to the next level... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
April 11, 2003
Mitch Gitman
Axis-orizing objects for SOAP Axis is an open source Java framework for implementing Web services over XML-based SOAP. This article guides the reader through the minefield of developing and deploying a sophisticated Web service using Axis. mark for My Articles similar articles
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... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
November 2002
B.J. Fesq
Sun boosts enterprise Java This article provides a clear understanding of the enterprise Java platform's direction and introduces J2EE (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition) 1.4's support for emerging Web services standards. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
June 20, 2003
Frank Sommers
J2EE 1.4 eases Web service development This article reviews J2EE 1.4's new client and server programming models for Web services. mark for My Articles similar articles
New Architect
October 2002
Kurt Cagle
When Good Servers Meet Bad Clients A review of Coherity XML Database (CXD) 3.0: strong server technology, but weak documentation and poor user interface. mark for My Articles similar articles
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... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
June 2001
Tarak Modi
Clean up your wire protocol with SOAP, Part 3 An even simpler way to create SOAP services using Apache SOAP and JavaScript... mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
August 2000
Jon Valesh
Product Review ImageStream IS Gateway and Rebel Routers: heavy-hitting performance, lightweight price. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC Magazine
May 18, 2004
Robert P. Lipschutz
Crafting Interoperable Web Services Web service interoperability has been a rather elusive goal. Now an organization dedicated to it provides help. mark for My Articles similar articles
New Architect
May 2002
Securing .Net A conversation with Microsoft's John Montgomery... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
August 2002
Michael Juntao Yuan
Access Web services from wireless devices The Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) has become the most important data exchange protocol for XML Web services. All Web services applications must support SOAP. This article introduces an essential tool to support Web services on small wireless devices -- the kSOAP parser. mark for My Articles similar articles
New Architect
October 2002
Michael Hurwicz
Web Services Made Easy Macromedia ColdFusion MX is a complete rewrite, offering several new features: Web services, new security framework, XML support, Unicode support, better integration with Flash and Dreamweaver, etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
August 1, 2002
Paul M. Holzmann
ImageStream's Rebel Router Nothing on the market today can touch the Rebel Router from a cost/savings perspective. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
July 2003
Gary Rivlin
McNealy's Last Stand Technical muscle and a history of innovation made Sun a Silicon Valley standard-bearer. It also blinded famously combative Scott McNealy to the coming Linux wars. Now he's fighting to survive. mark for My Articles similar articles
CIO
March 15, 2003
Christopher Koch
Your Opensource Plan Once a toy for geeks, open source is slowly but surely filtering into the enterprise and transforming the way software is designed, sold and supported. And any CIO without an open-source strategy in 2003 will be paying too much for IT in 2004. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
November 29, 2004
Clint Boulton
Web Services Now and When One of the most significant changes in the software industry has been the arrival of Web services, a truly distributed computing model in which applications "talk" to one another. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
June 2001
Dirk Reinshagen
XML messaging, Part 2 This article, the second of three, introduces SOAP to the XML messaging equation. The author begins by describing SOAP and other related technologies, then reinforces with a simple example using SOAP to create an invoice... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 20, 2002
Java Product News TogetherSoft plans WebSphere Studio support... Birdstep announces new databases... Poseidon for UML 1.4 now available... Davisor Chart enables interactive charts and reports... Amber Archer enhances class library with SOAP... Dirig adds Sun ONE support to Fenway solution... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
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? mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
February 2001
Linley Gwennap
Linux Enters Router Market Another potential market widens for Linux... mark for My Articles similar articles
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... mark for My Articles similar articles
PC Magazine
October 1, 2003
Robert P. Lipschutz
Test Make sure your web services are fast and accurate. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
March 2002
Ozakil Azim & Araf Karsh Hamid
Cache SOAP services on the client side This article describes how to create transparent, client-side caching for SOAP services using Java's Business Delegate and Cache Management design patterns... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
March 2002
James R. Borck
WebSphere Studio Application Developer 4.0 IBM's WebSphere Studio Application Developer 4.0 IDE can help small and midsize teams speed J2EE (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition) application development, but only if they work on Windows... mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
January 30, 2004
Alexander Wolfe
Q&A: Open-Source Guru Eric Raymond The president of the Open Source Initiative talks with the author about lots more than Linux and open source. mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
July 14, 2004
Don Marti
Money Talks At the end of May, IDC released a thorough report on server sales in the first quarter of 2004. Linux servers came in at more than $900 million for the quarter, up 56.9% from last year. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bank Technology News
August 2003
Michael Sisk
Linux Woos Wall St. The operating system's surprising popularity has turned the Linux revolution into a day at the beach. With firms such as Credit Suisse First Boston, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs becoming recent converts, it's clear that what began as a hobby has now become a full-fledged measure of technology adoption savvy. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
April 2001
Tarak Modi
Clean up your wire protocol with SOAP, Part 2 Creating applications that use SOAP is not difficult, and Apache SOAP makes it even easier. Part 2 of this four-part series on SOAP will introduce you to Apache's SOAP implementation and walk you through some simple examples that demonstrate the essence of creating SOAP-based apps... mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
May 2005
Lincoln Spector
Hide Your Internet Ports From Snooping Hackers Closing open ports... Turning off Windows new program notification... Printing fonts and saving paper... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 27, 2002
Java Product News Sun announces new J2ME APIs and J2EE improvements... Ilog launches JConfigurator 2.0... Sybase enhances PowerDesigner... Air2Web increases its Java capabilities... Hit adds new features to JDBC middleware product... TogetherSoft announces Mac and WebSphere support... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
CIO
November 1, 2003
Art Jahnke
Is Microsoft Less Expensive Than Linux? - Sound Off Microsoft is concerned that Linux's popularity is increasing. Readers debate the expense issue of open source versus Redmond. mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
August 1, 2002
Linux Timeline 100 of the most significant events in Linux history. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
January 2001
Alan Stafford
Warp Speed Web Access: Sharing the Bandwidth Broadband routers give your network a protected connection to the Internet... mark for My Articles similar articles
Wall Street & Technology
January 4, 2004
Jim Middlemiss
Early Adopters Endorse Linux While some are cautiously dipping their toes into the Linux pool, E*Trade's Josh Levine is taking the plunge. mark for My Articles similar articles
Home Toys
August 2004
John Schubert
Routers Versus Switches The simple solution is to determine if the customer is using an ISP without running any servers. If so, the installation will be easy, and the customer can be sold a router. If the customer needs more ports than are available on a single router, use switches. mark for My Articles similar articles
Knowledge@Wharton Linux: It's Growing More Popular, But Can It Do Windows? Can Linux gain market share on the desktop? mark for My Articles similar articles