|
> From: Bartell, Aaron L. (TC) > > Maybe it was a little tongue in cheek but nonetheless Stop right there... it's the "nonetheless" that loses the whole issue. Aaron, you get upset and you get snippy. You threw out a barb, and when I answered in kind, you got huffy. You need to drop it a notch, and stop complaining about how I'm not the world's most wonderful teacher. I ain't here to solve the world's problems, I'm just presenting my opinion, which happens to differ from yours, at which point you take it personally. All I did was disagree with your points, pretty much on a case by case basis. You are currently enamored with web services and .NET, and that's all fine, but I contend that web services are just another tool, not a universal panacaea. Allow that difference to be a starting point for a conversation, and not something for you to get your back up. Explain why you think web services is going to last longer than CORBA or APPC or any of the other communications techniques that preceded it. Explain why you think HTTP and XML will be universally accepted, especially when I pointed out that SOAP doesn't even require them anymore. This isn't about Aaron, this is about the technology and the decisions. Hey, I've been wrong before, and I'll be wrong again. Not sure I've told you this particular story, but back when CGA graphics first came out - pingpong ball sized pixels in a whopping four colors - I figured it would never catch on. I did a little math, and figured a 640x480 screen would require over ONE MILLION BITS to support any kind of color depth. And back then, we were squeezing entire operating systems into 16KB, so I came to the reasonable conclusion that graphics were never going to fly. Um. Well. I think history has proven me a bit wrong on that particular front <grin>. So, please, when I dropkick your idea that communications need to be XML and HTTP in order to be loosely coupled, it's not because I think Aaron Bartell is a bad person, or a stupid person. I just don't think that the technology yet agrees with that mandate. And I've been wrong. Time will tell. But today, it's just a buzzword. Sorry if I ticked you off. As I said, you sometimes get a little snippy, and I snapped back. Joe
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
This mailing list archive is Copyright 1997-2024 by midrange.com and David Gibbs as a compilation work. Use of the archive is restricted to research of a business or technical nature. Any other uses are prohibited. Full details are available on our policy page. If you have questions about this, please contact [javascript protected email address].
Operating expenses for this site are earned using the Amazon Associate program and Google Adsense.