Microsoft: Future Web Services Plans? 11
An Anonymous Coward writes: "According to News.com, Bill Gates announced a new software development architecture with a pretty low key name - the Global XML Web Services Architecture. According to the story Microsoft previewed four new specifications that it claims it will submit to standards bodies after a review period. The specs go by the names WS-Routing, WS-Referral, WS-Security, and WS-License. If Microsoft really discloses the way future Microsoft web services will work it should be possible for open source solutions to use them. Kind of makes you wonder where the catch is?"
Re:The catch (Score:2, Insightful)
If you're saying that Microsoft's implementation of the standard protocols will probably be better and more useful than anyone else's, then I don't see what the problem is - that's just normal competition. Chances are Apache will embrace any new XML-based internet standard anyway, so any MS implemention won't be competition-free and it's up to interested people to make sure Apache's implementation (or whoever's) can hold its own.
If you're saying that Microsoft will extend the protocol for their own good then I don't think they will - they're not adverse to pushing a technology simply for the greater good.
Take SOAP, for example: a distributed RPC mechansim without any platform ties. Microsoft didn't need a new distributed RPC mechanism for Windows only environments but they still contributed a lot to the SOAP standard and development. It wasn't purely developed by Microsoft. It has been proposed to (adopted by?) the W3C. It has its drawbacks, but as a text-based XML protocol it's a pretty good standard.
But what good is a standard if no-one implements or uses it? Worse still, what good is one standard if everyone else only implements a different one? Microsoft can use their market presence to ensure that all Windows systems are bundled with a free, easy-to-develop-for and standards compliant SOAP implementation.
Microsoft have made no move to crush Developmentor SOAP (but then Developmentor were in on the standardisation and Don Box give Keynote addresses for MS), nor have they attempted to crush Apache SOAP or any of the dozens other SOAP implementations out there. Yes, perhaps they are trying to shut out other XML-RPC mechanisms in favour of SOAP, but in this case I think that they are attempting to unify the world simply for the greater good.
The catch (Score:1)
Re:The catch (Score:1)
Re:The catch (Score:1)
Re:The catch (Score:1)