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Web Services: The Next Big Thing

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Title: Web Services: The Next Big Thing


1
Web Services The Next Big Thing
2
Why Next Big Thing
  • All the major vendors believe so!
  • http//www-3.ibm.com/software/solutions/webservice
    s/
  • www.microsoft.com/webservices
  • "We are betting the company on Web services,"
  • Microsoft Chairman William H. Gates III.
  • Intelligent Enterprise
  • One of the greatest ideas from 2001
  • One of the top trends in 2002
  • January 1, 2002, Vol 5, No 1

3
Presentation Outline
  • What is Web Services?
  • Why Web Services?
  • How Web Services work?
  • Web Services Architecture
  • Web Services Standards
  • Web Services Platforms
  • Web Services Implementation
  • Microsoft Visual Studio .Net
  • IBM WebSphere 4.0 (J2EE Platform)
  • Web Services Gaps in the Wall
  • Web Services The Future

4
Background
  • Need for Information
  • Our need for information is increasing day by
    day!
  • Bank account information
  • Travel information
  • Credit card information
  • Need for Integration
  • Enterprise applications are heterogeneous!
  • For every dollar spent on an application,
    corporations spend an additional 7 on
    integration Tom Berquist, MD of Research at
    Goldman Sachs.
  • Need for Interoperability
  • Object-model-specific protocols, such as DCOM,
    RMI, IIOP are not truly interoperable!

5
Web Services Defined
  • It is a new way of letting computers talk to
    each other over the Internet
  • It is a new model of distributed computing
    providing a high level of interoperability across
    platforms, programming languages and
    applications, enabling customers to solve
    integration problems easily.
  • A web service is programmable application logic
    accessible using standard Internet protocols and
    data formats, such as HTTP and XML.

6
Web Services Defined (contd.)
  • Web Services are also known as XML Web Services.
  • They are self-contained, self-describing, modular
    applications that can be published, located, and
    invoked across the web.

7
Web Services Examples
  • Early Example Microsoft Passport, an
    authentication service hosted by Microsoft.
  • Other examples
  • A Credit checking service that returns credit
    information when given a persons SSN.
  • A stock quote service that returns the stock
    price associated with a specified ticker symbol.
  • A purchasing service that allows computer system
    to buy office supplies when given an item code
    and quantity.
  • Applications will be built from web services that
    are dynamically selected at runtime based on
    their cost, quality, and availability.

8
Why Web Services
  • Interoperability
  • Any web services can interact with any other Web
    services.
  • The agonies of converting between CORBA, DCOM and
    other protocols should be over.
  • Can be written in any language, so developers do
    not need to change their development
    environments.
  • Ubiquity
  • Anything that supports HTTP and XML can host and
    access Web services.

9
Why Web Services (contd.)
  • Low Barrier to Entry
  • The concept is easy free toolkits are available
    to quickly create and deploy Web services.
  • Some of these toolkits allow pre-existing COM and
    JavaBeans to be easily exposed as Web services.
  • Industry Support
  • All the major vendors like IBM, Microsoft,
    Oracle, Sun, etc. are supporting Web services
    technologies.

10
Why Web Services (contd.)
  • Individual Perspective
  • Information Access
  • Example, multiple bank account, credit card info,
    travel info, etc.
  • Business Perspective
  • Three tiers of web services development
  • Tier 1 Enterprise Application Integration (EAI)
  • Tier 2 Interoperability with Key Partners
  • Tier 3 Interoperability across Multiple
    Companies
  • Business Ecosystem Integration of systems within
    organization and extend these capabilities
    outward to partners and customers.

11
Tier 1 Enterprise Application Integration
  • Web Services can be used to integrate internal
    applications.
  • It allows companies to expose legacy applications
    to business applications in heterogeneous
    environments without having to rewrite
    significant amounts of code.

12
Tier 1 Enterprise Application Integration
  • Example
  • Department Store Chain
  • Integrating different credit approval
    applications using XML Web Service.
  • Benefits
  • Link with POS, warehouse, and financial
    applications
  • Credit approval becomes more consistent
  • Maintenance cost decreased

13
Tier 2 Interoperability with Key Partners
  • Web Services allow for interoperability between
    applications across the public internet.
  • Example
  • Car Rental Company and Airline Car Rental
    Company created a translation engine using Web
    Services for sending data between two systems.
  • Benefits
  • Car Rental Company developed another large sales
    channel
  • Solution got to market quickly.

14
Tier 3 Interoperability across Multiple
Companies
  • Web Services allow for interoperability between
    applications across several companies.
  • Example
  • The insurance company, credit rating service, and
    dental provider orchestrated their applications
    to generate a quote that was requested by the
    customer on a corporate intranet.
  • Benefits
  • It generated quotes in half the time of its
    competitors and provided them via a corporate
    intranet to one of its major customers.
  • It automated existing business relationships at
    the level of multiple, interoperating
    applications. As a result, outsourcing became
    much more valuable, cutting the cost of quote
    generation by one third.
  • It provided a more seamless relationship with one
    of its biggest customers.

15
Web Services Benefits
  • Asked to CTOs In what areas will XML Web
    services be most effective for your company?

Source InfoWorld 2001
16
Web Services Benefits
  • BPA (Business Process Automation)

17
BPA (Business Process Automation)
18
Major Challenges
  • To succeed, there are many technical challenges
  • Discovery
  • How does a Web Service advertise itself for
    discovery by other services?
  • What happens if the service changes or moves
    after it has been advertised?
  • Reliability
  • How can reliability be measured and communicated?
  • What happens when a Web service host goes offline
    temporarily?
  • How do you know which other vendors to trust?

19
Major Challenges (contd.)
  • Security
  • How does a Web Service authenticate users?
  • Do services need to be able to provide security
    at the method level?
  • How do different services know about your
    security privileges?
  • Transactions
  • Should transactions like two-phase commit be
    integrated into Web services?
  • If so, how do the proposed standards support this
    transactions?

20
Major Challenges (contd.)
  • Scalability
  • How does a Web Service take care of
    load-balancing and scalability issues?
  • Does there need to be a new kind of Web service
    application server?
  • Manageability
  • What kind of mechanisms are required for
    maintaining a highly distributed system?
  • Do the managers of each of the various Web
    services need to coordinate in a particular way.
  • Is it possible to outsource the management of
    some of the Web services to other Web services?

21
Major Challenges (contd.)
  • Accountability
  • How do you define how long a user can access and
    execute a Web service?
  • How do you charge for the Web services?
  • Will the dominant model be subscription-based or
    pay-as-you-go?
  • Testing
  • How do you achieve predictable response time?
  • How do you debug Web services that come from
    different vendors, hosted in different
    environments and on different operating systems?

22
Types of Web Services
  • Remote Procedure Call (RPC)-based Web Services.
  • Conversational or Message-based Web Services for
    supporting loosely coupled asynchronous models.

23
RPC-based Web Services
  • Appears as a remote object to the client
    application.
  • The interaction centers around a service-specific
    interface.
  • Tightly coupled and resemble traditional
    distributed object paradigms, such as RMI or
    DCOM.
  • Synchronous, meaning that when a client sends a
    request, it waits for a response before doing
    anything else.
  • This is the type of Web services most vendors are
    focusing right now.

24
Conversational or Message-Based Web Services
  • Loosely coupled and document-driven.
  • Client invokes a message-based Web Service by
    sending it an entire document, such as a purchase
    order, rather than a discrete set of parameters.
  • The Web Service accepts the entire document,
    processes it, and may or may not return a result
    message.
  • Promotes a looser coupling between client and
    server and provide additional benefits beyond
    RPC-based Web Services.
  • Protocols are yet to be developed. Follows ebXML
    architecture.

25
How Web Services Work
  • Five requirements for RPC-based development
  • A standard way to represent data
  • A common, extensible message format
  • A common, extensible, service description
    language
  • A way to discover services located on particular
    web site
  • A way to discover service providers

26
How Web Services Work (contd.)
  • 1. A standard way to represent data
  • XML (eXtensible Markup Language)
  • XML is used to represent and describe DATA. It
    Separates
  • Presentation style,
  • data,
  • and vocabulary
  • Example of An HTML Purchase Order
  • eXtensible
  • Users can create their own tags (i.e., make up
    their own rules for markup).
  • (Taken from ACCT 5331 Class Notes)

27
How Web Services Work (contd.)
  • More on XML
  • Presentation
  • XSL (eXtensible Stylesheet Language)
  • Defines presentation style.
  • Can convert XML data into HTML presentation.
  • Data
  • Data is tagged in an XML file.
  • Vocabulary
  • DTD (Document Data Type)
  • XML Schema
  • Example of Purchase Order XML, DTD, HTML, and
    XSL file

28
How Web Services Work (contd.)
  • 2. A common, extensible message format
  • SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol)
  • Lightweight protocol specification that defines a
    uniform way of exchanging information in a
    decentralized, distributed environment.
  • It is an XML-based protocol consists of three
    parts
  • An envelop that defines a framework for
    describing what is in a message and how to
    process it.
  • A set of encoding rules for expressing instances
    of application defined data types.
  • A convention for representing remote procedure
    calls (RPCs) and responses using HTTP.

29
How Web Services Work (contd.)
  • 3. A common, extensible, service description
    language.
  • WSDL (Web Services Description Language)
  • An XML document that describes a set of SOAP
    messages and how the messages are exchanged.
  • WSDL is to SOAP what IDL (Interface Design
    Language) is to CORBA or COM
  • It is used to describe what a web service can do,
    where it resides, and how to invoke it
  • WSDL Example

30
How Web Services Work (contd.)
  • WSDL document uses the following elements in the
    definition of network services
  • Types - a container for data type definitions
    using some type system (such as XSD).
  • Message - an abstract, typed definition of the
    data being communicated.
  • Operation - an abstract description of an action
    supported by the service.
  • Port Type - an abstract set of operations
    supported by one or more endpoints.
  • Binding - a concrete protocol and data format
    specification for a particular port type.
  • Port - a single endpoint defined as a combination
    of a binding and a network address.
  • Service - a collection of related endpoints.

31
How Web Services Work (contd.)
  • 4. A way to discover services located on
    particular web site
  • 5. A way to discover service providers
  • UDDI (Universal Description, Discovery,
    Integration)
  • It is the yellow pages of Web services.
  • It provides a mechanism for clients to
    dynamically find other web services
  • It is an XML file that describes a business and
    the services it offers.
  • It also includes several ways to search for the
    services you need to build your application.
  • UDDI Example

32
How Web Services Work (contd.)
  • UDDI (Universal Description, Discovery,
    Integration)
  • Three parts to an entry in the UDDI directory
  • White pages Information such as the name,
    address, telephone number, and other contact
    information of a given business.
  • Yellow pages Information that categorizes
    businesses. This is based on existing
    (non-electronic) standards.
  • Green pages Technical information about the Web
    services provided by a given business.
  • There are plans for UDDI to support more complex
    business logic, including support for
    hierarchical business organizations.

33
Web Services Architecture
  • Generic Web Service Architecture

34
Web Services Architecture (contd.)
  • Global XML Web Services Architecture (Microsoft)

35
Web Services Architecture (contd.)
  • Global XML Web Services Architecture (Microsoft)
  • Baseline XML Web Services Specifications
  • SOAP
  • UDDI
  • WSDL
  • Global XML Web Services Specifications
  • WS-Inspection
  • WS-License
  • WS-Referral
  • WS-Routing
  • WS-Security

36
Web Services Architecture (contd.)
  • Global XML Web Services Architecture (Microsoft)
  • WS-Security
  • WS-Security describes how to use the existing W3C
    security specifications, XML Signature and XML
    Encryption, to ensure the integrity and
    confidentiality of SOAP messages.
  • WS-Security is a simple, stateless, SOAP
    extension that describes how digital credentials
    should be placed within SOAP messages, and how
    these credentials should be associated with a
    message to ensure message integrity and
    confidentiality.
  • WS-License
  • WS-License describes how several common license
    formats, including X.509 certificates and
    Kerberos tickets, can be used as WS-Security
    credentials.
  • WS-License includes extensibility mechanisms that
    enable new license formats to be easily
    incorporated into the specification.

37
Web Services Architecture (contd.)
  • Global XML Web Services Architecture (Microsoft)
  • WS-Routing
  • WS-Routing is a simple, stateless SOAP extension
    for sending SOAP messages in an asynchronous
    manner over a variety of communication transports
    such as TCP, UDP, HTTP.
  • WS-Routing provides addressing mechanisms that
    enable specification of a complete message path
    for the message (including its return path).
  • WS-Referral
  • WS-Referral is a simple SOAP extension that
    enables the routing between SOAP nodes on a
    message path to be dynamically configured.
  • This configuration protocol enables SOAP nodes to
    efficiently delegate part or all of their
    processing responsibility to other SOAP nodes

38
Web Services Architecture (contd.)
  • Web Services Architecture (IBM)

39
Web Services Architecture (contd.)
  • Web Services Components (IBM)
  • Service Providers
  • Provides services and maintain registry that
    makes those services available.
  • Service Brokers
  • Clearinghouses for services.
  • Act as matchmakers between service providers and
    service requestors.
  • Service Requestors
  • Work with service brokers to discover Web
    services, then invoke those services to create
    applications

40
Web Services Architecture (contd.)
  • Web Services Operations (IBM)
  • Publish/Unpublish
  • Involves advertising services to a registry
    (publishing) and removing those entries
    (unpublishing).
  • The service provider contacts the service broker
    to publish or unpublish a service.
  • Find
  • Performed by a service requestors and service
    brokers together.
  • The service requestors describe the kinds of
    services theyre looking for, and the service
    brokers deliver the results that best match the
    request.
  • Bind
  • Takes place between the service requestors and
    the service provider.
  • Negotiate so the requestor can access and invoke
    services of the provider.

41
Web Services Standard
  • The obvious politics!
  • Steven Lewis, a .Net evangelist for Microsoft,
    asked Simon Phipps, Sun's chief technology
    evangelist, whether Sun was planning to join a
    Web services interoperability group that was
    announced a week ago, spearheaded by IBM and
    Microsoft.
  • Phipps shot back a question of his own Why was
    Sun invited only the day before the announcement?
    "The way that standards processes are now being
    played out is in politics and power plays behind
    closed doors," Phipps growled.
  • What the heck are Web services?By Eric Schonfeld
    Special to ZDNetFebruary 19, 2002, 435 AM
    PTURL http//zdnet.com.com/2100-1107-839945.html

42
Web Services Standard (contd.)
  • Microsoft IBM jointly proposed the Web
    Services Framework
  • The focus of this document and the framework it
    defines is a model for describing, discovering
    and exchanging information that is independent of
    application implementations and the platforms on
    which applications are developed and deployed.
  • W3C
  • Various working groups develop various standards.
  • IETF

43
Web Services Standard (contd.)
  • ebXML
  • ebXML MissionTo provide an open XML-based
    infrastructure enabling the global use of
    electronic business information in an
    interoperable, secure and consistent manner by
    all parties.
  • ebXML (Electronic Business using eXtensible
    Markup Language), sponsored by UN/CEFACT and
    OASIS, is a modular suite of specifications that
    enables enterprises of any size and in any
    geographical location to conduct business over
    the Internet.
  • Using ebXML, companies now have a standard method
    to exchange business messages, conduct trading
    relationships, communicate data in common terms
    and define and register business processes

44
Web Services Standard (contd.)
  • OASIS
  • It is the international, not-for-profit
    consortium that advances electronic business by
    promoting open, collaborative development of
    interoperability specifications.
  • It operates XML.ORG, the non-commercial portal
    that delivers information on the use of XML in
    industry.
  • The XML.ORG Registry provides as an open
    community clearinghouse for distributing and
    locating XML application schemas, vocabularies
    and related documents.
  • OASIS serves as the home for industry groups and
    organizations interested in developing XML
    specifications.

45
Web Services Development Platforms
  • Microsoft .Net Platform
  • Visual Studio .Net (Finalist of 2nd Annual eWeek
    Excellence Award)
  • J2EE Platform
  • IBM
  • WebSphere Application Studio
  • BEA
  • WebLogic Platform 7.0
  • Iona Technologies Plc.
  • Orbix E2A Web Services Platform (Winner of 2nd
    Annual eWeek Excellence Award)
  • Sun
  • Sun ONE (Open Net Environment)
  • Rational Software Corp.
  • Rational ClearCase 2002 (Finalist of 2nd Annual
    eWeek Excellence Award)

46
Web Services Development Platforms
  • Microsoft - Visual Studio .Net
  • Vs.
  • IBM - WebSphere 4.0
  • Little History
  • At first, Microsoft published a white paper about
    creating Web Services with .Net versus IBM
    WebSphere V4.0. (IBM called it misleading)
  • IBM replied pointing out several problems in that
    white paper and claimed that Microsoft used IBM
    Web Services Toolkit instead of the single new
    integrated WebSphere Studio Application Developer
    tool.
  • http//www-3.ibm.com/software/info1/websphere/ne
    ws/ibmnews/compreview4.jsp
  • Microsoft released another version of white paper
    incorporating the new tool.
  • http//www.gotdotnet.com/team/compare/webservice
    compare.aspx
  • IBM did not reply(!?)

47
Web Services Development Platforms
  • Comparison of two functionally equivalent
    application one created using J2EE (IBM) and one
    created using .NET
  • Java Pet Store Sun call it as best practices
    for building J2EE-based application, also ships
    as a sample application with IBM WebSphere 4.0.
  • Description of the Pet Store Application
  • Return all information about an order given a
    specific order number
  • A customer should be able to call a method on the
    Pets Company server, and pass in an order number
    as a parameter, and have the Web Service return
    all the information for the order including all
    the line items for the order.

48
Web Services Development Platforms
49
Web Services Development Platforms
  • Development in Microsoft Visual Studio .Net

Step Description Tool 1 Create new Visual
Studio .Net Web Service Project Visual Studio
.NET 2 Create a PetOrder and PetOrderLineItem
with C Class Wizard Visual Studio
.NET 3 Write the code for the GetOrderDetails Web
Method Visual Studio .NET 4 Create SQL Server
or Oracle stored procedure for the Web
Service Visual Studio .NET 5 Test Web Service
through auto generated Sample Page and debug
service along with database tier Visual Studio
.NET 6 Create a new web application
project Visual Studio .NET 7 Add web reference
to Web Service created in previous
project Visual Studio .NET 8 Design Client
Application Web Page Visual Studio .NET 9 Add
the code behind for the client
application Visual Studio .NET 10 Build and
test application, able to debug through all 3
tiers Visual Studio .NET Total 10 steps
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Web Services Development Platforms
  • Development in IBM WebSphere Studio Application
    Developer

Step Description Tool 1 Create a new web
application project for the Web
Service WASD 2 Create a PetOrder and
PetOrderLineItem beans with public get and set
methods WASD 3 Write the code for the
GetOrderDetails Web Method. WASD 4 Create/test
Oracle stored procedure for the Web
Service Oracle DBA Studio 5 Configure service
instance with data source WASD 6 Run the Web
Service generation Wizard WASD 7 Test Web
Service through the generated EJB test client.
(However sample application does not support
arrays) WASD 8 Create a new web application
project for the client WASD 9 Copy the WSDL
files created earlier into the new project
WASD 10 Run the Web Service Client
Wizard WASD 11 Design Client Application Web
Page and wire up the proxy application WASD 12 B
uild and test application, able to debug through
2 tiers WASD Total 12 steps

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59
IBM WebSphere Studio Application Developer
(Generic Steps)

60
IBM WebSphere Studio Application Developer
(Generic Steps)

61
IBM WebSphere Studio Application Developer
(Generic Steps)

62
IBM WebSphere Studio Application Developer
(Generic Steps)

63
IBM WebSphere Studio Application Developer
(Generic Steps)
64
IBM WebSphere Studio Application Developer
(Generic Steps)
65
IBM WebSphere Studio Application Developer
(Generic Steps)
66
IBM WebSphere Studio Application Developer
(Generic Steps)
67
Web Services Development Platforms
  • For more information
  • IBM WebSphere
  • http//www-4.ibm.com/software/webservers/studio/W
    ebServicePaper/WorkingWithWebServices.htm
  • Microsoft Visual Studio .Net
  • http//msdn.microsoft.com/vstudio/
  • All Codes for Pet Shop Example
  • http//www.gotdotnet.com/team/compare/webservicec
    ompare.aspx

68
Web Services Development Platforms
69
Web Services Development Platforms
70
Web Services Development Platforms
  • Software Licensing Cost Comparison

71
Web Services Development Platforms
  • Comparison between .Net and J2EE
  • J2EE offers what IT managers want it is
    reliable, secure and scalable. But it is behind
    in development tools and XML support.
  • Microsoft has built .NET to make it easy to
    create web services and use XML. But it still has
    to prove that its platform is ready for
    heavy-duty corporate computing.
  • Applications for J2EE can be written only in
    Java, but they can run on any popular operating
    system.
  • .NET developers can use most languages (except
    Java), but their programs run only on the Windows
    operating system.

72
Web Services Development Platforms
  • Comparison between .Net and J2EE
  • Although originally developed by Sun, the Java
    technology today is practically an open standard,
    collectively maintained by the software firms
    that sell products based on it.
  • Microsoft controls .NET, although the company
    insists that its platform supports open standards
    better than any other (?).
  • Because Java is a standard, customers have a
    choice of J2EE products and can switch between
    them without being forced to rewrite their
    applications completely (which will keep vendors
    responsive and prices in check).
  • Microsoft counters switching from one J2EE
    vendor to another is often as costly as switching
    from J2EE to .NET. Customers would thus be better
    off picking a platform controlled by one firm
    than technology designed by committee.

73
Web Services Gaps in the Wall
  • Some people believe
  • Web services are only a partial answer to the
    complexities of enterprise application
    integration (EAI)
  • A large number of existing applications, and
    applications yet to be written, have no need to
    interoperate with other applications per se.
  • Web services dont represent a specific
    technology and dont imply a structure or format
    for application. So, we still need to build
    application that uses Web services based on
    traditional platforms like J2EE, .Net, Visual
    Basic or COBOL.

74
Web Services Gaps in the Wall
  • Technical Challenges yet to be addressed
  • No Consistent Transactional Model
  • Organization for the Advancement of Structured
    Information Standard (OASIS) is working on
    vendor-neutral transaction model.
  • But major vendors have yet to embrace this effort
    in any meaningful way (Microsoft, IBM, Oracle
    pursuing different approaches)
  • That Insecure Feeling
  • Security is not properly addressed in current Web
    services specifications.
  • Stepping Up Performance
  • Network latency bottlenecks
  • No specific models for detecting and managing
    failed transactions

75
Web Services Gaps in the Wall
  • Technical Challenges yet to be addressed
  • Getting the Message
  • Asynchronous use of Web Services
  • QOS issues What if SOAP transaction cant reach
    its destination
  • Your Schema, My Schema
  • Schema incompatibilities
  • The dynamic discovery process wont work
    without some knowledge of the meaning behind the
    schema

76
Web Services The Future
  • Most people are optimistic about the future of
    Web services.
  • Most of the big vendors are trying hard for
    standards (which is unusual!).
  • Good thing is that the problems associated with
    Web services are identified at the earlier stage
    and before a lot of implementations.
  • We just hope that Web Services will not be
    another high-tech hype that does not add any
    value to our lives!

77
The End
Thank You! (for not asking questions!)
78
References
  • Magazines
  • eWeek
  • Mar 4, 2002, Volume 19, Number 9
  • Feb 4, 2002, Volume 19, Number 5
  • Dec 31, 2001, Volume 18, Number 50
  • Mar 18, 2002, Volume 19, Number 11
  • Mar 11, 2002, Volume 19, Number 10
  • Feb 18, 2002, Volume 19, Number 7
  • Jan 14, 2002, Volume 19, Number 2
  • Jan 21, 2002, Volume 19, Number 3
  • Intelligent Enterprise
  • Feb 1, 2002, Volume 5, Number 3
  • Jan 14, 2002, Volume 5, Number 2
  • Jan 1, 2002, Volume 5, Number 1
  • Mar 28, 2002, Volume 5, Number 6

79
References
  • Information Week
  • Feb 11, 2002
  • Mar 25, 2002
  • Mar 18, 2002
  • Software Development
  • Jan 2002, Volume 10, Number 1
  • Websites
  • http//www.gotdotnet.com/team/compare/
  • http//searchwebservices.techtarget.com/bestWebLin
    ks/0,289521,sid26_tax288858,00.html
  • http//www-3.ibm.com/software/solutions/webservice
    s/news.html
  • http//www.internetweek.com/battle.htm
  • http//msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url
    /nhp/Default.asp?contentid28000442
  • http//www.internetweek.com/newslead01/lead101901.
    htm
  • http//www.internetweek.com/newslead01/lead102201.
    htm
  • http//www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/webservices/
    ?locdwmain
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