IBM Donates Web Services Invocation Framework to Apache 20
SharkaRockz writes "IBM recently donated the Web Service Invocation Framework (WSIF) to Apache.org. This article explains the WSIF donation and what it can do. WSIF is a simple Java API that allows both SOAP and non-SOAP services to be described and used in a common way thus allowing developers to make Web services without the constraints of SOAP."
dirty developers (Score:2, Funny)
IBM should know better... (Score:3, Funny)
...than to drop the soap for someone who wants to swing both ways!
;)
IBM donates Web Services Invocation Framework to A (Score:1, Flamebait)
Who in the world is "A"? The Apache group? Slashdot editors, please do not forget to actually PROOFREAD your own story text, links, and titles before making fools of yourselves yet again. I guess I keep forgetting that this is not ACTUAL journalism, where professionalism, acurate sources, and correct grammar matter.
Re:IBM donates Web Services Invocation Framework t (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:IBM donates Web Services Invocation Framework t (Score:1)
(Oooh! You speak French!)
Historical Irony (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Historical Irony (Score:1)
Re:Historical Irony (Score:1, Informative)
Last time I checked (approx 3 weeks ago), IBM was still cranking out mainframes.
Mainframes will never, never, EVER die, and neither will COBOL. They do too many vitaly important, boring as drying-paint, activities, and still do them better than Unix boxen.
The 80-Column Mind actually does fit a large problem domain...
Fixed, I mean FIXED Width! (Score:2)
Back in 98, I was working with a woman who was an experienced COBOL programmer. In a company where this skill had absolutely no value. When I asked her why she wasn't off hacking Y2K bugs, for more money, she told me one word: sanity.
Re:Historical Irony (Score:3, Informative)
They're still alive, well, and supporting lots more Linux than any dozen or hundred (depending on mainframe size) Pentium-based boxes can.
As for their traditional roles, check any Fortune 1000 back-office IT operation...
The open source thing reflects a return to IBM's original computing roots. There was a time when the idea of making software proprietary never occurred to anybody and user group contributions were welcomed, as they expanded the range and scope of the then-new commercial and academic computers of the 50s and 60s.
Well, yeah (Score:2)
Mainframes used to be the core product for the big 8 leading U.S. computer companies. (Sometimes known as "IBM and the Seven Dwarfs.) Now all eight companies have either disappeared or drastically changed their business model. IBM, with its market dominace, was able to ignore trend towards micros longer than anybody. I've hear former IBMers complain that fear of canibalizing their mainframe market was the main reason they didn't push OS/2 hard enough.
So yeah, IBM still sells mainframes. But if they had to rely on them for their main revenue stream, as they did for several decades, they'd be in big trouble. In fact, they were in big trouble, until they gave their old management the boot and replaced them with Gerstner and his crowd -- people who knew the company had to evolve, and fast. Did you know Lou Gerstner was the first IBM CEO to use email?
wow! (Score:1)
Re:wow! (Score:2)
Re:wow! (Score:1)
Maybe the sponsor will now be WSIF??
The need for a dynamic invocation framework (Score:4, Informative)
The need for a dynamic invocation framework
http://www.webservices.org/index.php/article/arti