Web Development News & Resources


At Tech.Ed: Microsoft says it has shipped 1 million Visual Studio .NET packs

Microsoft Corp. development tools managers put forward the company’s evolving vision for XML-based Web services at the Tech.Ed 2002 conference in New Orleans. --Apr. 12

Explaining Java and Web services

One of the biggest problems with Web services, said David Chappell and Tyler Jewell, is explaining it -- that is, pulling all the pieces together into a coherent and hype-free description of what Web services are and how developers can create and deploy them.

Will dirty data always be with us?

IT departments are dealing with more data than ever, but it is locked up in a patchwork of disparate repositories: legacy systems, relational databases, data warehouses, Web pages, e-mail and the like.

So long, silos, hello!

Jack Vaughan wonders if the mythical Rip Van Winkle were to awake from his 20-year snooze not at the end of the American Colonial era, but rather at the end of the Internet Gold Rush, that he actually wouldn't find all that much changed.

Sun targets Microsoft ASP and Passport

At JavaOne, Sun outlines its plans for the SunONE Platform for Network Identity.

Web services flow from JavaOne

JavaOne 2002 will make the case for Java over Microsoft and .NET as the platform of choice in the emerging world of Web services.

Web services can democratize EAI

In the next five years, Web services will democratize enterprise application integration, predicts Annrai O'Toole, CEO at Cape Clear Software. -Mar. 15, 2002

Web services: Tight or loose coupling?

As more work is done with Web services, some developers say they are encountering "limitations" in the technology. -Mar. 7, 2002

Time to manage those Web services

Question for Web services champions: Once the world is overrun with the technology, who's going to keep track of Web services to let them be used efficiently? -Mar. 7, 2002

BEA rolls out RAD tool at eWorld

BEA head Alfred Chuang launched his company's seventh annual developer conference, eWorld, last week with the unveiling of a Java RAD tool for Web services. -Mar. 4, 2002

.NET & Beyond: Confronting .NET myths

Many misconceptions about .NET revolve around the issue of Web services. It is worth the effort to clear things up, says David Chappell.

Web services: The next big thing?

Software developers rush to transform Web services from concept to solution. A look at the strategies of key IT suppliers.

Standards turf wars scale back

Tony Baer: "In development organizations, the intensity of vendor competition tends to politicize technology decisions. Today, choosing between Java and Microsoft technologies often equates to picking sides in a gang war."

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Gates and Co. roll out Visual Studio .NET

Billing it as nothing less than the 'most comprehensive development tool of all time,' Microsoft Chief Software Architect Bill Gates today rolled out the long anticipated Visual Studio .NET software suite at the VSLive! 2002 Conference in San Francisco.