XML Web Services

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Written for business and technical professionals, this book reveals the true value of XML for distributed information systems, explaining how it is transforming the way organizations manage data and build software systems, and the opportunities it offers for those organizations that understand its significance and impact. This book places XML at the heart of a paradigm shift that is bridging the gap between traditional tightly coupled proprietary networks (DCOM, CORBA) and the dynamic, loosely-coupled, data-driven Web. The author explains how XML's simple rules for defining data vocabularies and protocols have opened up new possibilities for server to server interaction in the form of Web services for dynamic discovery and interaction. He goes on to discuss how frameworks such as .NET and J2EE provide important messaging, transaction, and security services for leveraging Web services in enterprise computing.

  • Cost: $27.99
  • Pages: 256
  • Edition: 1st edition
  • ISBN: 0201776413

Resource Specification

Category:

XML : Books

Title / Program Name:

XML Web Services

URL:

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201776413/bigwebmasters-20

Screenshots URL:

http://www.bigwebmaster.com/screenshots/0201776413.jpg

Released Date:

March 5, 2002

Cost:

$27.99

List Price:

$39.99

Pages:

256

Edition:

1st edition

ISBN:

0201776413

Publisher:

Addison Wesley Professional

Author:

Frank P. Coyle

Keywords:

xml professionals, xml impact, xml information systems, xml rules, xml server, xml protocols, xml web servcies

Summary:

For distributed information systems

Description:

Written for business and technical professionals, this book reveals the true value of XML for distributed information systems, explaining how it is transforming the way organizations manage data and build software systems, and the opportunities it offers for those organizations that understand its significance and impact. This book places XML at the heart of a paradigm shift that is bridging the gap between traditional tightly coupled proprietary networks (DCOM, CORBA) and the dynamic, loosely-coupled, data-driven Web. The author explains how XML's simple rules for defining data vocabularies and protocols have opened up new possibilities for server to server interaction in the form of Web services for dynamic discovery and interaction. He goes on to discuss how frameworks such as .NET and J2EE provide important messaging, transaction, and security services for leveraging Web services in enterprise computing.

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