Archives


Sun comes to the table, as Microsoft leaves a dance

One company's entry into a standards group is quickly followed by the exit of a competitor from another.

Web Services Reflections: Q&A with Eric Newcomer

ADT's Jack Vaughan recently sat down with Iona CTO Eric Newcomer to discuss SOAP, CORBA and more.

Extending Eclipse

Want to know where to start to extend Eclipse? Dwight explains how to add a menu button to Eclipse's Workbench toolbar.

Objects keep track of County addresses

When Jefferson County, Colo., upgraded its County Address Management System (Cams), it decided to re-architect Cams in a component-based Java architecture running in a Linux environment.

Smalltalk lives on at St. Paul

When St. Paul wanted to re-architect its fat-client, object-oriented Smalltalk application as a distributed system hosting a fully Web-enabled interface, it created Extended Policy writing Online (ExPO), a browser-based application that generates and issues quotes in real-time.

ADT 2003 Innovator Awards

Application Development Trends profiles progressive development teams willing to risk corporate profits and even their own careers to gain an edge during hard times.

Corporate Express' E-Way goes real-time

When the e-business application that was at the heart of its success needed a major enhancement, Corporate Express created a new E-Way Web site that provides users with real-time pricing.

SOAP testing easier said than done

Emergence of Web services fundamentally changes traditional testing methods. Testers finally lose "waterfall" security blanket.

XML's demi-decade

XML injects fresh and very productive ideas into the discipline of software development, offering a fundamentally different view of data to programmers. But the debate continues over how to evolve the technology.

SOAP interoperability testing coming along

The Web Services Interoperability Organization is working on interoperability among different SOAP-based applications for Web services.

Configure at will! Allstate improves agent access

The goal of Allstate's AccessAllstate.com is to drive profitable growth for the company and meet customers' ongoing financial needs. The new system, which integrates several established systems, improves upon solutions that required the company's network of "producers" to call a service center to complete a transaction.

Things Remembered --Lessons learned

Things Remembered Inc. opted to explore Web services to gain important corporate goals. To improve their chances of success, they made sure to exploit long-running, in-house efforts that centered on the IBM MQ messaging middleware architecture.

Acquisitive ING links silos

In an effort to integrate data from more than 100 heterogeneous and legacy systems, ING developed the Enterprise Information Infrastructure. Part of the project's goal was to move from a batch-processing model to a near real-time model to improve business results and comply with federal regulations.

Web services security? Not yet.

Without an effective way to authenticate clients, guarantee the integrity of transferred data and to ensure data remains confidential during transit, Web services can be applied only in limited ways.

Aviall IT investment boosts bottom line in hard times

A change was in order when Aviall found that its new stovepipe systems made dealing with the company more difficult for customers, leading competitors to take advantage of the difficulties and forcing Aviall to slash prices.

XML spurs Liquidnet link to Europe

When Liquidnet Holdings Inc., a New York-based electronic brokerage, wanted to extend its trading to markets in Europe, it had to integrate back-office systems with European vendors and develop new features to support its expansion.

A management framework

What would a management framework look like if Web services assume more complex behaviors such as aggregating multiple synchronous or asynchronous interactions, or using discovery or involving third parties?

Nationwide spreads the warehouse wealth

Nationwide's Aries project brought together separate and mutually exclusive reporting apps built along with the original Nationwide data warehouse. The two primary applications -- revenue (premium) and cost (claims) -- were conceived and developed by separate departments with separate leadership and unique end-user requirements.

Advantage: The innovators

Once again, Application Development Trends honors some progressive IT organizations that took serious risks to build systems that could provide their company with long-term competitive advantage.

Real-time requirements drive ETL-EAI convergence

ETL-EAI convergence is underway. The trend, which blends ETL capabilities with EAI middleware traits, may have been slow to develop in recent years, but could gain momentum in months to come.