|
|
| Tuesday, June 24, 2003 | |
THE STAT
26Percentage of wireless customers who use their cell phones to take picturesMore Vitals
| ![]() ![]() Slowly Weaving Web Services Together Instead of exploding, the movement to help disparate computer systems easily communicate is gaining in fits and starts. Still, it'll likely have a powerful impact "As Big a Change as E-Mail" BEA Systems' Adam Bosworth, one of XML's chief architects, talks about the current state of Web services and the technology's potential How Amazon Opens Up and Cleans Up By allowing friendly hackers to access its data and feeds, the e-commerce giant is creating a fast-growing ecosystem where buying and selling thrive Where Web Services Meets the Road The technology is transforming the way carmakers operate -- just not in the same way, or with the speed, they originally envisioned Microsoft's Remembrance of Returns Past While the giant won't be begging for spare change any time soon, hot growth continues to elude it. Thus the big initiatives such as .Net |
COMMENTARY Business Software Needs a Revolution It's too complicated. It's too expensive. That's why it's change-or-die time (6/23/03) INFO TECH 100 Innovation, Lego-Style Computer giants are creating clever new products by snapping together industry-standard building blocks (6/23/03) TECHNOLOGY SAP Bridges the Computing Divide In a "plug-and-play" strategy, the software maker's new products will work with both Microsoft's .Net and Sun's Java standards (1/17/03) THE FUTURE OF E.BIZ The Web at Your Service In the next big phase of the Net, computers hooked to different Web sites will communicate behind the scenes, saving money and boosting productivity (3/18/02) |
|