Classic LDAP
Classic LDAP (April 1996): Doc Searls:
A Bulldozer Through the Intersection:
Craig Burton on Netscape’s Directory Strategy
The Man Behind the Bulldozer:
An Interview with Netscape’s Eric Hahn
software development, security, opinion
Archive for the ‘arch’ Category.
Classic LDAP (April 1996): Doc Searls:
A Bulldozer Through the Intersection:
Craig Burton on Netscape’s Directory Strategy
The Man Behind the Bulldozer:
An Interview with Netscape’s Eric Hahn
Mike Duffy explains how to disable smart tags in Apache. [Scripting News]
Steve Gillmor interviews Adam Bosworth on the future of XML. “If someone sends you a SOAP message and you want to know how to send them back a message, there’s no standard yet to say how to send them something back.” [Scripting News]
Sun’s Anne Thomas-Manes recommends that Java developers do use SOAP. There’s already a lot of interop. Get out from behind the wall of RMI and integrate with apps written in other languages and environments. And thanks for the pointer to our SOAP developers directory! Perfect example of romance. Links are the flowers of developer relations on the Web. Right on. [Scripting News]
ZDNet asks Do Java programmers really need SOAP? [Scripting News]
Dr Dobbs: Triumph of Simplicity: James Clark on Markup Languages and XML.
“If you peek under the hood of high-profile open-source projects such as Mozilla, Apache, Perl, and Python, you’ll find a little program called “expat” handling the XML parsing. If you’ve ever used the man command on your GNU/Linux distribution, then you’ve also used groff, the GNU version of the UNIX text formatting application, troff. If you’ve ever done any work with SGML, from generating documentation from DocBook to building your own SGML applications, you’ve undoubtedly come across sgmls, SP, and Jade.” [ZopeNewbies]
XSLT Quickly. Bob DuCharme’s new book, XSLT Quickly, has been
published by Manning. [xmlhack]
The Key to Encryption. E-commerce credit card theft does not often happen when most people think it does: during the transaction. More likely, the hacker simply breaks into the database of the e-commerce site, where the information is not encrypted. By Michelle Delio. [Wired News]
Sun and Veritas:
Samba Officially Supported on Solaris
[via Linux Today]