IBM and Microsoft extended a belated and belittling WS-I invitation to Sun. Are they trying to marginalise the Java creator's Web services stature?
Microsoft's John Montgomery is out to persuade developers to embrace .Net. But the task promises to be a chore in light of recent legal wrangling between Microsoft and archrival Sun.
An Australian software company has entered into the authentication battle between Sun and Microsoft, claiming to have released the world's first Java-interface to Microsoft.NET My Services. But is this a legitimate contender, or, as some suggest, a pretender?
Last month, the ECMA approved C# as a standard--raising the possibility that .Net might break free of its Windows underpinnings. Eric Knorr assesses the prospects.
Will AOL turn out to be the partner that Sun needs to displace Microsoft at the top of the corporate space?
IBM and Microsoft extended a belated and belittling WS-I invitation to Sun. Are they trying to marginalise the Java creator's Web services stature?
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