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Link - KEYWORD SEARCH RESULTS
Return to Links Main Page
4 - PRIMARY Keyword matches for ARTICLE
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"Web services" are offered up via WSDL (Web Service Definition Language) files. The happy web service developers out there create WSDL files (which are XML-based) that give application developers a way to grab data and present it to users. By accessing WSDL files, you can create an application that displays stock quotes or weather reports, locates ZIP codes, or sends text messages to a cell phone (just to name a few possible uses). In this case, we'll use a web service that grabs the definition of a word from DICT.org and display the results in a Flash interface.
To do this, we'll start by creating the interface using several of Flash's built-in user interface (UI) components. Then we'll use Flash Pro's Web Service Connector component to connect to the web service. Finally, we'll bind the data to the UI components.
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OASIS (Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards) is a not-for-profit, international consortium that drives the development, convergence, and adoption of e-business standards. The consortium produces more Web services standards than any other organization along with standards for security, e-business, and standardization efforts in the public sector and for application-specific markets.
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There are more than pages of online articles. These free articles covers the type of service-oriented architecture and related technologies shown in the above figure:
- Service-oriented architecture articles
- Service-oriented architecture (SOA) definition
- Web Services specifications and organizations
- XML background, specifications, and vocabularies
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- Application server articles
- Database articles
- Database concepts and standards
- Relational databases
- Object-relational mapping
- Object-oriented databases
- XML databases
- XML middleware
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Emerging web services standards such as SOAP, WSDL and UDDI will enable system-to-system integration that is easier than ever before. This site lists publicly available web services.
XSpace is an experimental shared database "space" that stores keyed SOAP envelopes . Now with asynchronous events and document-style interface.
Access XMethods through a variety of interfaces:
UDDI v
WS-Inspection
RSS
SOAP
DISCO
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8 - SECONDARY Keyword matches for WEB SERVICES
Click on any Title to go to that site
Click on any Primary Key to search by that keyword
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Technical articles, tutorials, reviews, buying guides. FREE facilitated online courses for tech subjects. (http://www.cnethelpu.com/)
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Excellent, relevant articles on everything from CRM to Web Services
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Tutorials and articles about high tech web design
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Dreamweaver Tutorials and Samples * Design * CSS * Templates * Accessibility * Application Development * ASP.NET * Databases * ColdFusion * Web Services * PHP * E-Commerce * E-Learning * Extensions * Sample Applications * Video Tutorials
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Service-Oriented Applications: the New Paradigm
The traditional model of building an application based on a separate database and application server, with separate security and a separate user interface, is dead. According to Gartner more new applications will be composed of service components assembled from other systems. And a Line survey estimates that by the end of , the average enterprise will already have deployed over such applications.
What’s the difference between the portal and the Enterprise Web? Take the tour!
Enter the Plumtree Enterprise Web Suite. Imagine every application enhanced with new services, like search, collaboration, profiling and personalization, able to authenticate against a variety of security models, and integrate content and services from enterprise systems such as SAP R/, Documentum, Siebel and PeopleSoft. Imagine each application working in concert with services hosted on different platforms, developed in different languages. Imagine each application developed in weeks, not months, and delivered to enterprise-wide audiences without the challenges of a separate Web infrastructure, a separate user paradigm, a separate marketing effort for the deployment. Imagine building an application on open standards, able to run on any industry-standard application server, using services provided by the Plumtree Enterprise Web Suite.
These service-oriented applications being developed by customers and partners within the Enterprise Web differ from traditional applications in three ways:
* They combine existing data and processes from enterprise systems with new shared services for greater return on assets;
* They are assembled dynamically, incorporating new capabilities on-the-fly for greater adaptability; and
* They are designed to be integrated into an enterprise-wide environment, so users can easily navigate between or search across applications, and Web services developed for one application can be re-used as-is in other applications. This results in enterprise-wide economies of scale.
Learn more about service-oriented applications developed by Plumtree and its customers and partners:
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TermChoir is a revolutionary information organizing and searching tool that enables information professionals to create and manage sophisticated data classification systems. It is a completely web-based editorial support system for managing and maintaining controlled vocabularies, classifications and thesauri, whether imported or created in-house. TermChoir can import any controlled vocabulary or data source, regardless of format, and allow easy maintenance and navigation of its structure.
The TermChoir organization and search mechanisms may be based upon either pre-defined standards or a customized, user-defined structure. TermChoir is open, scalable, secure, flexible, and multi-lingual. It supports most popular platforms and databases. Users access TermChoir either via client/server connectivity or through Internet/intranet/extranet web browser access.
TermChoir allows commercial information producers to package their intellectual property for ultimate customization by their end users, whether those end users are employees or licensed subscribers. Information architects, interface designers and information licensees then can customize their own information subject categories and classification systems, thereby creating unique, new and searchable work product and databases that originate from the pre-existing licensed vocabularies.
Some key features of TermChoir include:
* A fully integrated Web-based architecture that enables controlled vocabularies created by TermChoir to be accessed, updated and searched regardless of physical location or type of computer used.
* A Web-based open platform that allows the use of any operating system, any Web server, and any client.
* Flexible data connection capabilities supporting most popular relational DBMS environments for creating controlled vocabularies utilizing enterprise-level databases.
* Powerful customized reporting in addition to standardized thesaurus reports.
* Superb data validation that guarantees the integrity of your data.
* Extraordinary data editing capability that allows you to view and edit terms within their hierarchical context to create a thesaurus easily and quickly.
* Multi-lingual support for creating and managing data in any language and searching with automatic translations.
* User-based permissions for control of information accessibility at all levels.
* Unparalleled data transformation capability that enables import and export of thesaurus data regardless of differing formats.
* Web Thesaurus Navigator for automatic generation from the thesaurus a Web site with alphabetical, hierarchical and expandable hierarchical listings.
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XML integrated with many other methods
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Applying XML and Web Services Standards in Industry
XML.org Focus Areas provide domain-specific content on XML standards. Each XML.org Focus Area covers news, standards and initiatives, vendors, consortia, trade associations, government agencies and implementers, events, and resources germane to a specific domain.
XML.org Focus Areas for Insurance (http://insurance.xml.org/), Human Resources (http://hr.xml.org/), and Printing & Publishing (http://publishing.xml.org/) are now available. Future XML.org Focus Areas will include Financial Services, Defense Logistics, Education, Tax/Accounting, E-Government, Security, Retail, Localization & Globalization, E-Marketplaces, and others.
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