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    Web Service Listings
    Total:  45Displaying: 11 - 20Pages: << 1 2 3 4 5 >>

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    Asynchronous Web Services Invocation in .NET Framework 2.0
    By Thiru Thangarathinam Go to page: 1 2 3 Next Synchronous communication between .NET applications and Web services makes the user wait while each Web service processes requests and returns results. This can have a severe impact on the performance of the .NET application. Typically, a distributed .NET application requires information from multiple Web services. If the application performs the entire process of invoking the Web services synchronously, a client must wait not only until...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    .NET Remoting Versus Web Services
    By Thiru Thangarathinam Go to page: 1 2 3 4 Next With the advent of .NET and the .NET Framework, Microsoft introduced a set of new technologies in the form of Web services and .NET remoting. .NET remoting and ASP.NET Web services are powerful technologies that provide a suitable framework for developing distributed applications. It is important to understand how both technologies work and then choose the one that is right for your application. The Web services technology enables...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    Working With Asynchronous .NET Web Service Clients
    While many developers realize that consuming Web Services using the asynchronous call mechanisms built into .NET is useful, they also find it confusing. If you\'ve had trouble trying to use the asynchronous call methods in your generated proxies-or if you\'re wondering what asynchronous means in the first place-this article helps clarify some things and makes your programming tasks (at least as related to asynchronous...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    .NET Web Service Connects Educators
    A program for underprivileged schools trades in the file cabinet for the file system, with dramatic results. registration system. by Jason Salas SEI CEO John Jasper, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, and DePaul Center for Urban Education Director Barbara Radner. Jasper and Radner used .NET technologies to streamline communications between DePaul and educators in the Chicago public school system through the development of an intuitive XML Web service. M any educators share a common hardship:...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    Develop Transactional .NET Web Services
    With distributed applications becoming pervasive, you need tools and techniques to create, destroy, and monitor transactions across multiple platforms and servers. Having these tools and techniques available within a single architecture such as the .NET Framework makes it easy to develop distributed applications and handle transactions. This article looks at the transaction support the .NET Framework provides, which you can use to develop...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    Navigate the Web Services Hype Cycle
    Web services are a critical element of .NET, but they come with risks and maturity issues. by Mark Driver ADVERTISEMENT September 2002 Issue For this solution: .NET Framework, Visual Basic .NET, C# W hen you think of the new .NET platform,Web services are likely one of the first things that come to mind. In fact, the idea of software services exposed and consumed over the Internet using open and standard protocols is at the core of the .NET value proposition. Much has been written...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    Web Service Secrets
    Introduction Welcome to Web Service Secrets! I\'m Karl Moore and this is the twelfth and final installment of the .NET secrets series, the bundle of articles based on my latest book, VB.NET and ASP.NET Secrets . Today, we\'ll be exploring a bundle of Web service tips and samples to wire your applications, including: Five Things You Need to Do Before Publicizing Your Web Service Improving Performance with Easy Caching Adding Google Search to Your Programs...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    Proof Web Services to Ensure Success
    Web services must perform and scale to keep users happy. By developing objective criteria for proofing Web services, businesses can increase uptime and lower costs. by Frank Cohen For this solution: Visual Studio .NET S ystems, or software applications, deployed today using Web services provide users with features that are highly functional, integrated, and personalized. For example, online stores, company directories, portals, and online messaging services enable users to sign in,...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    Web Service's Test Harness: A Functional, Load, and Performance Testing Framework for Web Services
    Introduction The lifecycle of any application typically involves four phases— requirements , design , development , and testing . Testing is the phase that guarantees value delivery to the customer. Testing, being an important process in the SDLC, is an area where better and efficient testing strategies meeting different requirements are sought after. In the new world of Web services, it becomes all the more important, as very few tools are...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    Building Web Services with Visual Studio .NET
    In a real world scenario, applications have to get information from other programs for various purposes. These programs may be located on the local system, on an Intranet or on the Internet. Java introduced Remote Method Invocation (RMI) and CORBA for achieving these types of tasks. With RMI, developers can call methods in a remote system. With the help of CORBA, developers can call methods running in a totally different operating system...

    Updated: 05/30/2005

    Web Service Listings
    Total:  45Displaying: 11 - 20Pages: << 1 2 3 4 5 >>



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