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'xml extensible'.

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Microsoft readies InfoPath update

News The new version also will enhance support for use of custom dialects, or schemas, of XML (Extensible Markup Language), the basic language behind InfoPath and other e-forms products. Microsoft is set to release a trial version of its first major...

[February 23, 2004, 9:30]

Microsoft drops Smart Tags from Windows XP

News Smart Tags, which are created using Extensible Markup Language (XML), could have strengthened Microsoft's ability to tie its newest applications and operating systems to its own Web sites or others that it favours, including those that charge fees.

[June 28, 2001, 8:47]

Web speech effort gets new voice

News The SALT Forum, founded 18 months ago by six companies including Microsoft, Cisco Systems, Philips and Intel, has not seen widespread adoption of its specification, which consists a handful of Extensible Markup Languge (XML) tags.

[April 2, 2003, 15:49]

Software giants unite for Web services

News These include XML (Extensible Markup Language), a standard for data exchange and allows competing technologies to communicate and work together; Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP), which describes how Web services communicate over the Internet...

[February 6, 2002, 11:38]

Telecom '99: Oracle, IBM roll out mobile e-commerce

News The Java-based Portal-to-Go translates HTML first into XML (Extensible Markup Language) and then into a format used by a device -- either WAP (Wireless Access Protocol) or the device's native format. Both Oracle and IBM are making moves to deliver...

[October 11, 1999, 12:37]

Corel agrees to sell out for £64m

News Instead, the company has promoted a comeback strategy based on tools that add XML (Extensible Markup Language) functions to common types of documents. Struggling software maker Corel announced on Thursday that it's likely to accept a buyout offer...

[June 6, 2003, 10:46]

Microsoft drops .Net name from server brand

News Used broadly in the industry, the term Web services is an umbrella phrase to describe modular applications that can easily exchange data over the Internet using XML (extensible markup language)-based protocols.

[April 17, 2003, 8:05]

SAP swoops during PeopleSoft chaos

News The extensions, based on the RosettaNet and Chem eStandard XML (Extensible Markup Language) data formats, will make it easier for different companies to exchange transactional information that's used in business applications, SAP said.

[June 12, 2003, 9:33]

Behind Microsoft's 'experience' strategy

News By making its various operating system, application and developer tool products able to share data via protocols, such as the Extensible Markup Language (XML) and Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) messaging protocols, Microsoft is aiming to...

[February 6, 2001, 8:38]

IBM pumps up 'on demand' power

News Web services standards are Extensible Markup Language (XML)-based, which makes it easier to exchange information between disparate systems. IBM is sharpening its "on demand" vision of computing with products and marketing programs geared toward its...

[February 17, 2003, 12:05]

CES: Microsoft aims to simplify wireless world

News In attempting to bring everything from a digital watch to a Web tablet into the .Net fold, Microsoft has made efforts to use open standards such as XML (eXtensible Markup Language), so that any standards-compliant device should be able to take...

[January 9, 2002, 17:21]

IBM revamps WebSphere

News Tivoli Access Manager will work with Kerberos and the XML (Extensible Markup Language)-based Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML), which are two systems for conveying identity information to network access control software.

[November 7, 2003, 15:05]

Microsoft aborts Jupiter bundle

News BizTalk also will incorporate support for the proposed Web services standard called Business Process Execution Language, which uses XML (Extensible Markup Language) to route data in work flow. Microsoft has shelved plans to bundle its server...

[February 19, 2004, 10:50]

Sun uncloaks 'virtualised' computing

News It's likely computing processes themselves will run using Sun's Java software and the industry-favoured XML (Extensible Markup Language) data description language, because those technologies work well across different companies' products.

[February 8, 2002, 14:22]

You know when you've been Gatored

News The extensible markup language (XML) feature let Web surfers use pull-down menus to obtain additional information about select content. It's called getting "Gatored," and some Web sites are out to restrict the practice.

[August 7, 2001, 14:47]

Microsoft: Web services stuck in first gear

News Programmers have to develop a deep knowledge of Extensible Markup Language ( XML), the basis of all Web services, he said. Lucovsky helps lead a team of software engineers at Microsoft charged with developing the company's .Net products, a new set...

[April 16, 2002, 10:09]

Slash builds free portals

News All you need to set up a Slashbox is a data source that can generate an Extensible Markup Language (XML) file. Large companies can invest in expensive intranet portal software to provide one-stop information shopping for their employees.

[October 3, 2002, 14:06]

China: Bursting with brainpower

News Researchers in his lab, one of four Intel research groups in China, have worked on projects to enhance Linux technology for Intel-based telecommunications servers, make the Palm operating system work with its Xscale chip, write software drivers...

[July 11, 2002, 7:57]

Antivirus 'drivers' secure MS Exchange

News The new version of Word will essentially place a flag in the header of any documents containing XML (Extensible Markup Language) code. Microsoft on Monday will detail a future version of Windows that will make it easier to detect and isolate viruses.

[April 14, 2003, 14:20]

Group releases formal Web-services standard

News Contributors to Soap, based on the W3C's Extensible Markup Language (XML) recommendation, include AT&T, Canon, DaimlerChrysler Research and Technology, Ericsson, IBM, Macromedia, Matsushita, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP and Sun Microsystems.

[June 26, 2003, 8:48]

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