Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Web Services/SOA
Application/Web Development
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

Users seek answers on Indigo

Microsoft moves to reassure developers at VSLive event
 

Sign up to receive Web Services Resource Alerts

February 14, 2005 (Computerworld) -- SAN FRANCISCO -- Microsoft Corp. last week vowed to dramatically boost developer productivity with its forthcoming Indigo communications technology for building Web services. Some users, however, say they're still grappling to understand the tools in Indigo's .Net Framework predecessor.


At Microsoft's VSLive conference in San Francisco, executives of the software vendor provided new details about Indigo, which Microsoft describes as a set of .Net technologies that can be used to build and run connected systems. Officials said the Indigo unified programming model is an extension of .Net Framework 2.0 that can be used to build advanced Web services.


Microsoft initially planned to ship Indigo only as part of the next-generation Longhorn operating system, but last summer it decided to make the technology available for Windows XP and Server users (see story).


A prebeta community technology preview of Indigo will be released in March.


Because it's based on standards like WS-Security and WS-Reliable Messaging, which were developed by Microsoft and its partners, the Indigo subsystem will allow developers to create advanced Web services by writing much less code than is required today, Microsoft executives said.


In addition, the adherence to emerging standards will allow Web services created in .Net to more easily interoperate with those created by technologies from other vendors, like IBM and BEA Systems Inc., that are also involved in creating the standards, according to Microsoft.


"In the past, security and reliability were an afterthought," said Ari Bixhorn, lead product manager for Microsoft's platform strategy group. "With Indigo, we built all that in from Day 1. Developers should be able to focus on the business problem in their code."
But some developers are still focusing on mastering initial attempts at using Web services to tie together applications without hard-coded integration, and they question whether Indigo can help speed that task along.
Indigo "looks nice on paper, but I will have to see it in action," said Richard Hawk, a developer at West Bend Mutual Insurance Co. in West Bend, Wis., who has been using Visual Studio .Net 2003. "We're trying to develop Web services on an IBM mainframe, and it has been very painful trying to tie together all that information."


ServiceMaster Clean in Memphis has been using Visual Studio .Net 2003 since late last year to build a handful of Web services for internal integration. But Allen Nelson, ServiceMaster's director of information systems, said Microsoft's description of Indigo's place within .Net still lacks clarity. "I don't know how it fits in [or] if it will even change our code," he said.


Fei Ho, vice president of software at ABN Amro Holding NV, a financial services firm with U.S. headquarters in Chicago, said his organization, which recently started using .Net, will wait until Web services standards stabilize before upgrading to Indigo.

Continued...
1 | 2 | NEXT  



Print this Story Send Us Feedback E-mail this Story Digg! Digg this Story Slashdot this Story
Users seek answers on Indigo
Sidebar: VS 2005 Eases Web Development
Sidebar: Microsoft Executive Explains VS 2005
"A free monitoring tool from Hyperic will be a boon to those who depend on cloud-based services from Amazon...." Read more...
"It's IT Blogwatch: in which Dan Kaminsky reveals all to a stunned Black Hat audience: yes, the sky is falling...." Read more...
Read more Internet posts or See all Blogs
Microsoft: We'll help other vendors find, fix their bugs
Free Windows XP tuneup: Put new life into an old workhorse
Politics 2.0 heats up traditional summer doldrums
Judge rejects student visa injunction sought by H-1B opponents
Kaminsky: Many ways to attack with DNS
TSA relaxes laptop screening rules this month
Road-warrior conundrum: Laptop or handheld?
First responders get more emergency communications options
$12 Indian 'TV computer' a knockoff of '80s Nintendo system, not Apple II
Jobs shakes up Apple management over MobileMe debacle
More top stories...
Russian hacker gang steals with impunity, says researcher
Microsoft promises 12 patches next week
Credit card thieves ran a polite, professional help desk
Bet on it: Employee wagers help companies predict the future
Massive faux-CNN spam blitz uses legit sites to deliver fake Flash
Search closing in on e-mail as most popular online activity, report says
At LinuxWorld, problem-solvers hunt open-source solutions
SQL Server 2008's future 'cloudy' as Microsoft releases new database
Missing Registered Traveler laptop found
New Google tool aims to provide more insight into online searches
Step away from the hype: The gadget known in some quarters as the Second Coming is distinctly mortal on five significant fronts. Eric Lai and Matt Hamblen have the details.
Don't miss our list of dumb but common monetary mistakes IT leaders make — and how to avoid them.
Blogger Seth Weintraub has been hearing some interesting things about Apple's upcoming line of portable computers.
CIOs plan sharp reductions in contract staff, professional services and hardware, and almost no investment in cloud computing, according to a Goldman Sachs survey.
Reviews, analyses, how-tos, visual tours, hot issues and predictions about Microsoft's new OS.
Four years from now, the IT field will be a vastly different place. Will you be ready?
All Zones
Application Performance Zone
Business Continuity Zone
Data Center Management Zone
Enterprise-Class Security Zone
The File Data Management Zone
Security Management Zone
ITIL Best Practices Zone
The SAS Zone
Storage Virtualization Zone
Business Intelligence and Analytics Zone
Identity & Security Management Zone

Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Long Tail Supplier Collaboration - What's In It For You?
Long Tail Supplier Collaboration - What's In It For You?
Download this webcast, free, compliments of Sterling Commerce
Go to the webcast 
Virtualization Everywhere
Download this white paper, free, compliments of Citrix.
(Source: Citrix) Adoption of virtualization is concentrated among large enterprises, while adoption by mid-sized companies has been much slower. For these companies, the cost and complexity of server virtualization solutions has been a barrier.

In this paper, we'll discuss how Citrix XenServer" provides simple, economical server virtualization for any size company. Download now!

Download this white paper go
Learn-Fast Guide: Software as a Service is Growing Up
Download this Computerworld Executive Briefing, a $195 value, for free! Compliments of Akamai.
(Source: Computerworld) SaaS is here to stay as an application delivery channel. You will be using it, but will you do so wisely? This Learn-Fast Guide will prepare you for software delivered over the Web. From security issues to contract negotiations, there's a lot to consider ... and a lot to gain.
Download this executive briefing download
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
Archiving Compliance with Sunbelt Exchange Archiver
The Impact of Messaging and Web Threats
Web Security SaaS: The Next Generation of Web Security
View more whitepapers