WS Process
Web 2.0 - Its Component Model and Message Exchange Patterns
The W3C released WSDL 2.0 as a Candidate Recommendation on January 6, 2006. The Web Services Description Group, part of the Web Services Activity, made three main documents publicly available for review: Part 0: Primer - Intended to be a less-technical introduction to the main concepts described in the Core Language. Part 1: Core Language - Describes the elements for the abstract concepts and the constructs for binding concrete implementations found in the Adjuncts document. Part 2: Adjuncts - Defines the predefined extension points and mechanisms for pairing WSDL with its most likely partners SOAP and HTTP.
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#5 |
SYS-CON India News Desk commented on 22 May 2006
The W3C released WSDL 2.0 as a Candidate Recommendation on January 6, 2006. The Web Services Description Group, part of the Web Services Activity, made three main documents publicly available for review: Part 0: Primer - Intended to be a less-technical introduction to the main concepts described in the Core Language. Part 1: Core Language - Describes the elements for the abstract concepts and the constructs for binding concrete implementations found in the Adjuncts document. Part 2: Adjuncts - Defines the predefined extension points and mechanisms for pairing WSDL with its most likely partners SOAP and HTTP.
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#4 |
SYS-CON India News Desk commented on 19 May 2006
The W3C released WSDL 2.0 as a Candidate Recommendation on January 6, 2006. The Web Services Description Group, part of the Web Services Activity, made three main documents publicly available for review: Part 0: Primer - Intended to be a less-technical introduction to the main concepts described in the Core Language. Part 1: Core Language - Describes the elements for the abstract concepts and the constructs for binding concrete implementations found in the Adjuncts document. Part 2: Adjuncts - Defines the predefined extension points and mechanisms for pairing WSDL with its most likely partners SOAP and HTTP.
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#3 |
SYS-CON Australia News Desk commented on 19 May 2006
The W3C released WSDL 2.0 as a Candidate Recommendation on January 6, 2006. The Web Services Description Group, part of the Web Services Activity, made three main documents publicly available for review: Part 0: Primer - Intended to be a less-technical introduction to the main concepts described in the Core Language. Part 1: Core Language - Describes the elements for the abstract concepts and the constructs for binding concrete implementations found in the Adjuncts document. Part 2: Adjuncts - Defines the predefined extension points and mechanisms for pairing WSDL with its most likely partners SOAP and HTTP.
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#2 |
Web 2.0 News Desk commented on 18 May 2006
The W3C released WSDL 2.0 as a Candidate Recommendation on January 6, 2006. The Web Services Description Group, part of the Web Services Activity, made three main documents publicly available for review: Part 0: Primer - Intended to be a less-technical introduction to the main concepts described in the Core Language. Part 1: Core Language - Describes the elements for the abstract concepts and the constructs for binding concrete implementations found in the Adjuncts document. Part 2: Adjuncts - Defines the predefined extension points and mechanisms for pairing WSDL with its most likely partners SOAP and HTTP.
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#1 |
SOA Web Services Journal News Desk commented on 17 May 2006
The W3C released WSDL 2.0 as a Candidate Recommendation on January 6, 2006. The Web Services Description Group, part of the Web Services Activity, made three main documents publicly available for review: Part 0: Primer - Intended to be a less-technical introduction to the main concepts described in the Core Language. Part 1: Core Language - Describes the elements for the abstract concepts and the constructs for binding concrete implementations found in the Adjuncts document. Part 2: Adjuncts - Defines the predefined extension points and mechanisms for pairing WSDL with its most likely partners SOAP and HTTP.
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