Top 10 reasons to migrate to .Net
News Standards integration: XML, SOAP, and more SOAP is an XML-based protocol that communicates with Web services. The integration of SOAP allows for easy programmatic access by any client, whether or not that client is running a Microsoft operating...
[November 19, 2002, 11:50]
Microsoft .Net for Linux?
News According to the latest SEC filing, these services include web services that support the XML format defined by the WWW Consortium (W3C), the Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) as defined by the W3C, the Web Services Description Language (WSDL...
[October 13, 2000, 9:25]
Prepare yourself for the Internet-based application revolution
News You're protocol independent as a result of Soap, so use the right tool for the job at hand. Understanding Web service interoperability" "Why you should build next-generation applications now" "New tools make Web services more secure and practical...
[June 27, 2003, 10:21]
Laplink ShareDirect review
Reviews Laplink ShareDirect requires the Microsoft .Net framework, a layer of Internet networking protocols that includes SOAP, XML and UDDI (Universal Description, Discovery and Integration). If you don't already have the framework installed, the...
[February 23, 2005, 11:45]
Aesthetics versus practicality
News SOAP versus .Net Remoting Let's look at a key example of implementation cost that is a common discussion point for .Net architects -- using SOAP or using .Net Remoting. Although they certainly agree that the use of SOAP via HTTP over a standard IP...
[February 20, 2003, 10:31]
What .Net actually means for CIOs
News These classes not only represent a developer's interface to hardware and system resources on the underlying system, but also wrap industry standard protocols like SOAP, WSDL, HTTP, SMTP, HTML, and others that allow developers using the .Net...
[February 5, 2003, 14:34]
.NET: A guide for managers
News Also, .NET technology itself is based on XML Web services, which use standard protocols such as SOAP and XML data to connect applications and Web services. SOAP: The Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) is basically there for information exchange.
[May 2, 2003, 13:18]
Practical examples for establishing Web service security in .NET
News The SecurityContext class extends the SoapHeader class, which tells the .NET Framework that it's a Soap Header and allows you to reference this class in the attribute. Let's explore programmatic Web service security using Visual Studio .NET to...
[May 6, 2003, 13:08]
Silverlight 2 announced
Blog Out-of-the-box support allows calling REST, WS*/SOAP, POX, RSS and standard HTTP services, enabling users to create applications that integrate with existing back-end systems. This is a compatible subset of the full .NET Framework.
[October 13, 2008, 18:07]
Web service development with Java
News With acronyms like XML, UDDI, WSDL, and SOAP becoming commonplace. As I stated earlier, chapters are devoted to SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI. Individual chapters focus on the various Web service technologies (with a Java spin): SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI.
[May 16, 2002, 22:53]
Hard choices ahead for developers
News In doing so, the company will be able to argue that the specs are built on XML and SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol), two of the emerging standards behind the shift to Web services. It's not at all clear that SOAP is necessarily better than XML...
[November 23, 2001, 16:01]
Microsoft and Sun in new clash
News On Tuesday, Microsoft published the final 2.0 release of the Framework, which specifies how businesses should implement XML and the Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) backed by Microsoft, IBM, and others.
[December 13, 2000, 8:35]
J2EE vs .Net: Making that vital development decision
News If the investment is in Microsoft, you have to be willing to believe that Microsoft will solve its security problems (or that you can continue to architect around them) and be glad that your developers can make a relatively smooth transition from...
[June 13, 2002, 15:45]
Microsoft to divulge more XML plans
News Microsoft and IBM teamed with other companies to create several XML-based standards, including SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol), which would serve as a common communications format that links the different programming models, allowing...
[July 27, 2001, 15:52]
.Net attributes are more than decoration
News The WebService and WebMethod attributes signal the compiler that these attributes should be accessible using the SOAP protocol. Among the most confusing and misunderstood elements of the .Net framework are the purpose and uses of attributes.
[July 5, 2002, 20:37]
Streetmap plans to conquer Europe
News It uses Active Templating as well as SOAP and XML, and can be exported to other applications as an ActiveX or other control. The application was developed using Microsoft's .Net Compact Framework, which delivers applications for Pocket PC and...
[July 5, 2002, 7:57]
Speculation about Microsoft's mysterious X#
News One of the more intriguing things to come out of Microsoft lately was a nearly throw-away comment from Don Box, a principle creator of the SOAP architecture and an architect with Microsoft's XML Standards group.
[April 10, 2003, 14:57]
Microsoft.Net to woo developers in US
News ASP+ takes advantage of emerging Web programming standards, such as XML and Simple Object Access Protocol (Soap). The company is expected to detail its so-called .Net framework -- the environment that enables the creation, deployment and...
[July 11, 2000, 12:15]
Sun brews fresh Java for mobile devices
News J2EE 1.4, for its part, supports Web services features such as UDDI and ebXML registries and repositories, SOAP, XML processing and schemas and the Web Services Description Language (WSDL), Sun said. Microsoft's .Net Compact Framework competes with...
[September 26, 2002, 11:54]
Microsoft: Best of breed doesn't work
News SOAP does this to an extent, he said, "but while .Net is open, (Bill) Gates has said you get a richer experience if you have .Net client on your device -- that is what I call lock-in. Hutson contended that because Microsoft runs everything on the...
[March 4, 2002, 16:34]



