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XML in the Content Lifecycle Presentation»rank: 6649218by: ZapThink, Ronald D. Schmelzer
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XML in the Content Lifecycle Report: Creating, Managing, Publishing, Syndicating, and Protecting Content with XML»rank: 6649218by: ZapThink, Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :Key Findings: The market for XML content lifecycle solutions is expected to grow from $1.8 Billion in 2003 to over $11.6 Billion by 2008. Producers of content in the enterprise spend over 60% of their time locating, formatting, and structuring content and just 40% of their time actually creating it. By 2008, about 60% of all content lifecycle products will be XML-enabled. the primary challenge in the enterprise for producers of content -- information that is intended for human consumption -- is content reuse: the ability to integrate content from disparate sources. Efforts to improve content processes have been slowed by efforts to extract and manipulate content from multiple, disparate data sources. ... |
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XML Proxies Report: XML-Aware Network Appliances and Firewalls»rank: 6649218by: ZapThink, Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :Key Findings: XML Proxies are hardware or software solutions that actively listen for XML traffic on the network and either pass it along unmodified or perform some action on the XML content. XML Proxies can operate transparently as an XML 'gateway' or as auxiliary applications on the network. ZapThink estimates that XML represents less than 2% of all traffic on the enterprise network in 2002; however, this percentage is expected to increase to almost 25% of all LAN network traffic by 2006. Current firewall and proxy solutions are inadequate to handle XML traffic. Instead of being simply network protocol-aware, XML Proxies are XML-aware. XML Proxies are capable of examining traffic at the ... |
The XML Standards Landscape Presentation»rank: 5331780by: ZapThink, Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :Key Findings: XML Proxies are hardware or software solutions that actively listen for XML traffic on the network and either pass it along unmodified or perform some action on the XML content. XML Proxies can operate transparently as an XML 'gateway' or as auxiliary applications on the network. ZapThink estimates that XML represents less than 2% of all traffic on the enterprise network in 2002; however, this percentage is expected to increase to almost 25% of all LAN network traffic by 2006. Current firewall and proxy solutions are inadequate to handle XML traffic. Instead of being simply network protocol-aware, XML Proxies are XML-aware. XML Proxies are capable of examining traffic at the ... |
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XML, Web Services & Service-Oriented Architectures Competitive Landscape Presentation»rank: 5331780by: ZapThink, Jason Bloomberg, Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :This interactive session will explore the emerging XML, Web Services and Service-Oriented Architecture markets and help attendees understand how various vendors are positioning their products and services. Starting first with definitions of the Web Services and SOA markets, the instructors will discuss a roadmap to SOA adoption that can guide an enterprise through its XML, Web Services, and SOA projects. Attendees will learn which current business requirements are addressed by Web Services and SOA solutions, what products are on the market today that can help you with your Web Services and SOA initiatives and what steps should be taken by a company to build an SOA. Key Issues: Exploration of the different ... |
ZapNote: Adobe ZapNote: Network Publishing with XML»rank: 5331780by: ZapThink, Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :Network publishing is simply an extension of current publishing paradigms that allows users to locate content items on a network and publish them to a variety of destinations, which may or may not be known ahead of time. Adobe has taken a comprehensive approach to network publishing by creating the Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP), a description framework that provides an open standard for XML exchange. XMP encloses metadata inside application files, thus enabling applications such as Digital Rights Management (DRM) and workflow automation. XMP is meant to facilitate easy metadata exchange between applications and systems in integration and publishing workflow systems of all kinds. |
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ZapNote: Advent Global Publishing Solutions»rank: 5331780by: Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :Network publishing is simply an extension of current publishing paradigms that allows users to locate content items on a network and publish them to a variety of destinations, which may or may not be known ahead of time. Adobe has taken a comprehensive approach to network publishing by creating the Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP), a description framework that provides an open standard for XML exchange. XMP encloses metadata inside application files, thus enabling applications such as Digital Rights Management (DRM) and workflow automation. XMP is meant to facilitate easy metadata exchange between applications and systems in integration and publishing workflow systems of all kinds. |
ZapNote: Altova ZapNote: XML Developer Intelligence with XML Spy»rank: 5331780by: ZapThink, Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :While previous versions of Altova's XML Spy product were focused on serving solely the needs of XML developers, the new version of the product adds a new market – XML content creators and users. The Austrian company hopes to bring XML spy from developer-focused IDE to a comprehensive product line that covers two major markets: developers and non-technical content users. |
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ZapNote: ASC ZapNote: Working Towards Cross-Industry Convergence»rank: 5331780by: ZapThink, Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :As part of a joint initiative with the UN/EDIFACT Working Group, the ASC X12 working group aims to create a set of Joint Core Components (JCC) that will serve as the basis for business objects valid for both X12 and UN/EDIFACT business processes. These business processes can then be applied to XML initiatives as well as future, as-of-yet-undeveloped efforts. In particular, these Core Components will be applied to the work of the ebXML group, which is seeking to develop a cross-industry lingua for e-Business. |
ZapNote: Attunity ZapNote: Service-Oriented Integration»rank: 5331780by: ZapThink, Ronald D. Schmelzer
: :Service-oriented Integration (SOI) provides an "arms-length" means for systems to simply expose their interfaces while abstracting their internal processes, thus simplifying integration. Attunity has a compelling set of solutions for facilitating the creation of SOI-enabled systems and simplifying integration challenges within organizations. Attunity seeks to expose a wide variety of data sources including custom and legacy systems as services that are used a step in automating business processes both within and external to the organization. |