At last week's EEMA conference in Prague, J2EE 1.4 spec lead and Chief Web Services strategist Mark Hapner said: "The biggest obstacle we face is [user organisations] not seeing incremental improvements in businesses as they incrementally increase their investments in [Web Services] technology."
Web services must start delivering, says Sun
A sober warning to people who are too quick to jump on the band wagon. :)
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Hapner: Web services must start delivering (2 messages)
- Posted by: Floyd Marinescu
- Posted on: June 20 2003 18:32 EDT
Threaded Messages (2)
- Hapner: Web services must start delivering by Nick Laborera on June 23 2003 10:29 EDT
- Real problem by David Levin on June 25 2003 18:02 EDT
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Hapner: Web services must start delivering[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: Nick Laborera
- Posted on: June 23 2003 10:29 EDT
- in response to Floyd Marinescu
Here! How real people doing it. Sun needs to speed-up JWSDP to catch-up. In Java there is no single implementation of webservice "plumbing", a lot of people tends to do trial and error if what is the best out there. -
Real problem[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: David Levin
- Posted on: June 25 2003 18:02 EDT
- in response to Nick Laborera
This is not a real problem.
There is a lot of Applications Servers out there too.
The problem is standard support and interoperability.
Why are creating all these standards, WSDL, etc, if nobody supports them.
Ever try to interoperate with .Net?