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Todays Featured Content:

F5 Boasts Industry's First On-Demand Application Delivery Controller, Redefining Performance and Scalability with the Introduction of VIPRION

New F5 bladed chassis enables large enterprises and service providers to easily manage a complete application-fluent infrastructure; VIPRION gives customers control over management, power, space, and operating expenses

The Role of the Adaptive Network in Service-Oriented Architectures

For networkers to successfully deliver applications, it is not just a matter of adding more capacity or connectivity. A higher degree of automation, integration, and architectural design is required, with network-based intelligence as the foundation.

SOA Success Depends On a SON

Jeff Browning, director of product management for F5 Networks, looks at how network technology has evolved to better support service oriented architectures, and why incorporating a service oriented network is critical for SOA success.

F5 Commands Worldwide Market Share Lead for Application Delivery Controllers

Leading industry analyst firm places F5 at the market share forefront of ADC vendors

Taming Your Flock of NAS Devices

NAS devices are easily deployed but capacity limited, leading to an administratively unmanageable number of NAS devices as mount/share points multiply. This administrative quagmire is further complicated with a multi-vendor NAS data center where cross-vendor functionality is often lacking.

Featured Content provided by F5 Networks

Three Specifications Submitted to W3C

Thursday 16 March 2006

W3C members submitted the WS-Eventing, WS-Transfer and WS-Enumeration specifications.

Today the W3C acknowledged and published the Member Submissions of the WS-Eventing, WS-Transfer and WS-Enumeration specifications, along with a big list of co-submitters.

 

WS-Transfer

The Web Services Transfer Submission was received from BEA Systems, Computer Associates, Microsoft, Sonic Software, and Systinet, A Mercury Division.

WS-Transfer is a SOAP-based protocol for manipulating resources and their representations. One can create, modify, delete resources, as well as retrieve representations of those resources.

This protocol is built using the SOAP messaging framework, both version 1.1 which is a W3C Member Submission and version 1.2 which is a W3C Recommendation, and the WS-Addressing Member Submission.

 

WS-Eventing

The Web Services Eventing Submission was received from BEA Systems, Computer Associates, IBM, Microsoft, and Tibco Software.

WS-Eventing is a SOAP-based protocol to subscribe to notifications. The subscriber receives event messages from an event source, and can manage its subscription with a subscription manager.

This protocol is built using the SOAP messaging framework, both version 1.1 which is a W3C Member Submission and version 1.2 which is a W3C Recommendation.

 

WS-Enumeration

The Web Services Enumeration Submission was received from BEA Systems, Computer Associates, Microsoft, Sonic Software, and Systinet, A Mercury Division.

WS-Enumeration is a SOAP-based protocol for "XML elements that is suitable for traversing logs, message queues, or other linear information models."

This protocol is built using the SOAP messaging framework, both version 1.1 which is a W3C Member Submission and version 1.2 which is a W3C Recommendation.

 

For more information about the submissions, click here .