ALSO CALLED: Extensible Markup Language and X M L DEFINITION: XML (Extensible Markup Language) is a flexible way to create common information formats and share
Definition continues below.
WHITE PAPER: Posted: 09 May 2008 | Published: 01 Jun 2007
SUMMARY:
XML has emerged as an important driver for SOA-enabled business agility and growth because it is not tied to any specific platform, language or system.
WHITE PAPER: Posted: 28 Apr 2008 | Published: 01 Mar 2007
SUMMARY:
Many of the challenges associated with SOA deployments are the same challenges when deploying traditional web-based applications. The key to addressing SOA-related challenges is to identify them as early as possible and include the appropriate ...
WHITE PAPER: Posted: 18 Apr 2008 | Published: 09 Jan 2007
SUMMARY:
This Application Platform Strategies report by Senior Analyst Richard Monson-Haefel explains Ajax and recommends how an enterprise should adopt Ajax.
WHITE PAPER: Posted: 31 Mar 2008 | Published: 01 Jan 2007
SUMMARY:
This paper seeks to help IT managers become proactive in managing their business-critical applications and drive application effectiveness in their organizations. It uncovers some of the greatest challenges found in management of business-criti...
WHITE PAPER: Posted: 26 Mar 2008 | Published: 26 Mar 2008
SUMMARY:
Learn 12 key considerations for e-signature success and how the solution can help you be more competitive by closing deals faster, saving money, reducing errors and eliminating the paper jam that happens in the mail room.
WHITE PAPER: Posted: 25 Mar 2008 | Published: 25 Mar 2008
SUMMARY:
These five phases of report development will enable your company to improve application data access, enable users to answer ad hoc questions and build a rich, extensive report library. Explore pitfalls to avoid and how to increase ROI from reporting.
WHITE PAPER: Posted: 29 Nov 2007 | Published: 01 Nov 2007
SUMMARY:
A data warehouse isn't the whole truth without data from complex sources. Learn how complex data gives analytic applications greater accuracy and enables new operational applications.
XML DEFINITION (continued): both the format and the data on the World Wide Web, intranets, and elsewhere. For example, computer makers might agree on a standard or common way to describe the information about a computer product (processor speed, memory size, and so forth) and then describe the product information format with XML. Such a standard way of describing data would enable a user to send an intelligent agent (a program) to each computer maker's Web site, gather data, and then make a valid comparison. XML definition sponsored by SearchSOA.com, powered by WhatIs.com an online computer dictionary
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