As XML documents begin to proliferate in the corporation, developers will consider native XML storage. But big RDB vendors are responding.
Methodology gurus say a software "Developer Assistant" can finally bring process to IT development organizations, bringing artificial intelligence back to the forefront.
Application integration provides the first, best test case for Web services. Early users say to start small, develop skills and make sure staff understands overall business processes.
XML initiatives, including Web services, have much to gain by associating themselves with efforts such as the OMG's MDA.
Start-up DataPower Technology, Cambridge, Mass., is among a handful of hardware start-ups that foresee bottlenecks in XML processing as use of the tag language technology grows in middle-tier computing.
Dan Romanschik reviews "Python Web Programming" by Steve Holden (with David Beazley).
Hackers, crackers and script kiddies; attacks on corporate networks are coming from all sides. Blocking the threats requires more than software tools. Experts say the answer lies in "people, processes and technology."
What chance do young companies in the open-source application server space have today?
Everyone knows the basics of network security, but a little review never hurt anyone.
One of the biggest problems with Web services, said authors 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.
Everyone is talking about Web services, but take it from Randy Mowen, lead solutions architect for an award-winning, cost-saving application of the new technology, it takes careful planning to do it right.
Many in the high-tech world are betting heavily on a bright future for Web services.
Full J2EE servers are outside the open-source province, but handy application servers, XML modules and servlet engines -- often in commercial packs -- hold ground.
There are statements about Web services that I see repeated in the press, expressed at conferences and even written on billboards that just aren't true. In this column, I'll address the misconceptions I see as most ripe for correction.
Programmers Report Supplement Editor Jack Vaughan talks with Don Box.
Java continues to thrive in enterprise computing. Here lies a sampling of recent ADT excursions in spaces of the Java kind.
So-called Grid computing was one of the new technologies on display at this week’s developerWorks Live! conference for IBM developers in San Francisco. WebSphere updates were also taps. -May 10
This page provides a handy jumping point to ADT coverage on these pivotal topics.
A decade-long effort to build useful data marts and data warehouses has set
the stage for a new generation of analytical application software tools that
find patterns in the vast quantities of corporate data available for consumption.