|
|
By Tony Gupta  Here is my 'five-minute XML' series where by I give you scheduled byte size guides.
Today's issue is good for those people that happen to be starting out with XML.
In "XML Schema - Overview" (5 Minute XML #7), I reported the need for a schema definition language. I defined principle ... Sep. 21, 2011 07:15 AM EDT Reads: 1,829 | By Jeremy Geelan  "Virtualizing hardware appliances is pretty tough, it's pretty much impossible," says Intel’s Blake Dournaee in this informative and forward-looking webinar currently screening on SYS-CON.TV. Co-presenting with Oracle’s Vikas Jain, the webinar discusses three game-changing innovations.... Sep. 29, 2009 11:30 AM EDT Reads: 5,670 | By Ron Schmelzer  As XML becomes ubiquitous throughout the enterprise, it increasingly taxes the systems that must deal with it. Even though there are a wide range of hardware and software solutions coming to market that aim to alleviate XML's performance bottlenecks (See ZapThink's XML Proxies Report),... Jul. 29, 2009 06:30 AM EDT Reads: 4,167 | By Jimmy Zhang  Since its inception, XML has been criticized for the overhead it introduces into the enterprise infrastructure. Business data encoded in XML takes five to 10 times more bandwidth to transmit in the network and proportionally more disk space to store. Aug. 5, 2008 06:40 AM EDT Reads: 55,236 Replies: 10 | By Jack Kennedy  The software delivery process has long faced many challenges, many of which are exacerbated by the need for organizations to update their internal architectures and the methodologies they use to build and deliver solutions. Over 80% of software projects are delivered late, over 50% don... May. 19, 2008 06:15 AM EDT Reads: 8,932 | By SOA News Desk Popular assumptions can often be dangerous. We will consider how the many unique and highly-regarded architectural characteristics of SOA, such as loose-coupling, can actually be a two-edged sword affecting the requirements, nature, and success of many important aspects of SOA, especia... Oct. 11, 2007 05:15 PM EDT Reads: 8,695 Replies: 1 | By Bruce Eckel 'The Java backlash,' writes Bruce Eckel, 'has been building up steam, and we're starting to see some fundamental shifts because of it.' Java has been around for 10 years yet applets are not the primary way that we interact with the web. Applets are not ubiquitous, and everyone got exci... Jun. 7, 2007 10:15 AM EDT Reads: 139,538 Replies: 38 | By XML News Desk The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) has published three new standards to help vendors improve Web services performance for customers: XML-binary Optimized Packaging, SOAP Message Transmission Optimization Mechanism, and Resource Representation SOAP Header Block. Jan. 27, 2005 12:00 AM EST Reads: 26,517 Replies: 4 | By XML News Desk Justsystem, based in Japan, is previewing a technology that many say has the potential to bring seismic change in the way XML is used. With xfy, different XML documents can be joined together and used, without interoperability issues. Nov. 18, 2004 12:00 AM EST Reads: 21,655 Replies: 1 | By XML News Desk Pioneering content management company, Mark Logic, has partnered with Stylus Studio, in an effort to make building XML content-centric applications easier for its customers. Nov. 18, 2004 12:00 AM EST Reads: 19,963 Replies: 1 | By Derek Denny-Brown Microsoft's Derek Denny-Brown explores the various issues he has with the XML 1.0 specification, including whitespace, allowed characters, and lastly XML Namespaces - 'which pushes an immense burden of complexity onto the APIs and XML reader/writer implementations,' argues Denny-Brown. Oct. 20, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 9,464 | By XML News Desk The producers of the XMLSPY development environment, Altova, today announced availability of its XMLSPY Certification Exam, an expert-level, 50 question exam designed to test developers' knowledge of important XML-related specifications as well as their proficiency with XMLSPY 2004. Aug. 12, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 15,854 | By Mike Haehn One of the basic challenges of XML developers is formulating best practices and design guides for defining their XML content. In the financial industry, the Interactive Financial eXchange (IFX) Forum has been working for over seven years to develop a business message specification to s... Aug. 3, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 13,248 Replies: 1 | By Philip Burton; Russel Bruhn; Gary A. Thompson For the biologist, the bioinformatic analysis of genes requires the compilation of tables of gene characteristics. To do this, data is often taken manually out of databases in an ad hoc fashion. Different databases (TIGR, MIPS, BLAIR, and NCBI, for example) give different outputs in di... Aug. 3, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 12,724 | By Les Wilson The emerging world without wires has fostered a growing number of small and mobile devices (everything from PDAs to smart phones) capable of accessing data and running applications. The trouble is, while devices are getting smaller, human hands and fingers are not. Aug. 3, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 22,570 Replies: 3 | By XML News Desk IBM's 'Project Cinnamon,' still in beta but due to be released with IBM's next DB2 release, will put XML at the heart of DB2 Content Manager and allow customers to create automatically the data model of a database based on the document type definitions or XML schemas they choose. Jul. 30, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 23,451 | By Amlan Debnath In recent years the application server has greatly evolved, expanding the set of core services provided by the infrastructure. The current Java platform supports XML data handling, scalability, load balancing, and other capabilities that allow application-level services to be developed... Jul. 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 32,333 Replies: 2 | By Mike Lehmann If you've been working with integration technologies for any length of time, you're well aware of the freight train of standards that has been careening through the industry during the last five years. These standards, particularly in the Web services space, are on the verge of doing t... Jul. 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 21,605 | By Sue Vickers; Peter Moskovits Enterprise portals provide a single interface to aggregated and componentized information. They significantly reduce the navigational issues inherent with Web sites and make it easier to publish information from disparate sources. The basic building blocks of enterprise portals are por... Jul. 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 15,050 | By Matthew Zager My colleague wrote an article for XML-J two years ago about an opportunity we had to solve our data management challenges with XML. The result of our work was our XML Data Services (XDS), an XML data access language and processing engine, which allowed us to quickly and easily manage t... Jul. 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 18,749 | By Suresh Damodaran; Neelakantan Kartha This article will explain how XML is used to enable businesses to work together via the Internet, in the context of the RosettaNet B2B framework. Looking at proven frameworks such as RosettaNet is important as it provides insight into what works today, and what will become important to... Jun. 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 16,894 | By Keith Swenson Imagine a customer has hired you to put together a solution for managing a huge quantity of XML information. The firm's team is using XML because it gives them flexibility in how the data is structured. They like the fact that they do not need to specify a given record structure up fro... Jun. 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 11,494 Replies: 1 | By Michael Segura We all know that in today's threat-conscious world, communication is more than a convenience. To protect their organizations and the public in the event of a natural disaster, terrorist strike, or other significant threat, businesses and governments have been forced to reassess their a... Jun. 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 8,219 | By David Linthicum The transformation layer is the 'Rosetta stone' of the system. It understands the format of all information being transmitted among the applications and translates that information on the fly, restructuring data from one message so that it makes sense to the receiving application or ap... Jun. 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 16,998 | By Peter Allan Horsfield The whole point of teams is to allow different specialties to complement one another and achieve the extraordinary, so it can only be a good thing to reduce the barriers between them. This article shows how to eliminate the interdependency between HTML design skills and XML processing. Apr. 30, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 14,281 Replies: 1 | By David Linthicum When dealing with application integration, as you know by now, we are dealing with much complexity. The notion of ontologies helps the application integration architect prepare generalizations that make the problem domain more understandable. Apr. 30, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 32,044 | By Mark Young XML signatures apply digital signatures to XML documents. Digital signatures let parties that exchange data ensure the identity of the sender and the integrity of the data. This last item is a benefit that physical signatures can't provide. Sep. 23, 2002 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 14,100 |
|
|