|
[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] What are web services good for? (WAS: RE: Two new features of th eWeb)
What are web services good for? What are they not good for? Useful topics: contract-based business (not the interface contract of the remote systems, but the contracts for services among the businesses), orchestration of processes to ensure compliant deliverables, hierarchical review and remote decision making (authority and delegation); how are QOS issues and defaults on contracts detected and handled? I have this sense that some consider web services another technology in search of a problem to solve. I have this sense that the simple solution advocated may promise but cannot deliver when the requirements become complex. Are web services just a document management system writ large or can they enable a very wide distributed application that does more than post weblogs? A crab moves but for the crab, sideways is forward. When there are obstacles, that well may be so, so a survey of the terrain is in order to determine the path to a goal. If the path has no goals that can be clearly expressed, then the direction is meaningless. This is as true for the web as for the crab. Len http://www.mp3.com/LenBullard Ekam sat.h, Vipraah bahudhaa vadanti. Daamyata. Datta. Dayadhvam.h From: Dave Winer [mailto:dave@u...] Check this out: http://www.google.com/search?q=blogger+xml-rpc Two new features: 1. Google is indexing much more frequently. Blogger and XML-RPC is a new thing. Just started in August (this year). 2. Look at all the support that's building for Blogger as a Web service. So the Web keeps moving forward despite all the reasons for not doing so.
|
PURCHASE STYLUS STUDIO ONLINE TODAY!Purchasing Stylus Studio from our online shop is Easy, Secure and Value Priced! Download The World's Best XML IDE!Accelerate XML development with our award-winning XML IDE - Download a free trial today! Subscribe in XML format
|
|||||||||

Cart








