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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: SOAP and the Web
They do. WSDL. As for the use of resources out there, one can make the case for the water, but the horse chooses. The legal problem is what the W3C warranties. The political problem is not to dilute the so-called imprimatur of the specification organization by grand standing on the SOAP specification to the point that to make any more progress, SOAP vendors and their customers believe that they have to seek other authorities. It's much easier with specifications. Then the technology has to speak for itself. Calling these standards means the organization has to be the authority and that spells trouble where technologies are emergent. If the authority says "we have a better way and we won't recognize your way" then the submitter is backed into a corner with nothing to lose and a lot to gain by going elsewhere. So far, they are going to their customers and their customers are approving. This is exactly how ISO hit the skids. IMO: SOAP 1.2 needs to go forward. Code is shipping; it is a fait accompli. REST advocates, the TAG, etc., and the WGs have to spend time working out a RESTy SOAP given that this can be established as a requirement. The education of the community has to continue based on clear and simple comparisons such as are emerging from these threads and the articles so when an implementor must choose, and they are the ones who choose for their customers, they do so completely aware of the lifecycle consequences of the architecture, both in the short term of implementation, and in the long term of support and maintenance. What we field, we must support. Control of promises is the sine qua non of good management. len -----Original Message----- From: Mark Baker [mailto:distobj@a...] On Wed, May 01, 2002 at 11:07:20PM +0100, Bill de hOra wrote: > If it's the case that this use of SOAP "*cannot*" win, what's all the > fuss about? Seriously. Because there's a whole lot of resources being spent on this stuff that could be directed towards improving and expanding the Web. To Len; I agree with you, except most Web services proponents I've talked to *want* to be able to gain the benefits of the Web with Web services.
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