News

Rivals such as Microsoft, Oracle and IBM flooded the wires and airwaves with praise for XML, a software standard that allows the exchange of information over the Internet. All these companies had the ...
XML is the high-tech industry's new "favorite word," as the technology rides a wave of popularity last witnessed just a few short years ago with Java. Along with the hyperbole comes an overload of ...
The World Wide Web Consortium last week announced at a conference that it had formally approved a recommended specification for defining the structure and content of XML-based business documents. The ...
XML, a way to code documents for easy transfer between applications, is widely seen as a key enabling technology for e-commerce in the future. Today’s HTML-based Web just can’t provide the flexible ...
Ingeniux Will Embed IXIASOFT's Native XML Database in Enterprise Version of Ingeniux CMS; Introduces a New Generation of Highly-Scalable, Pure XML Content Management Services. IXIASOFT, the native XML ...
Microsoft yesterday announced that it is adopting industry-standard Extensible Markup Language (XML) technology for the default file formats in the next version of Microsoft Office editions, currently ...
Sun Microsystems is linking two prominent Web development languages--Java and XML--to simplify e-commerce software development and to better position Java against rival technologies. Sun on Monday ...
For Web programmers, the Extensible Markup Language (XML) is not only a lingua franca – it’s the water that floats the boat, the air that holds up the plane. In other words, it’s a free resource ...
Snapbridge Software, an XML technology start-up based in San Diego, is set to unveil a drag-and-drop tool for XML and non-XML data federation at the XML Conference and Exposition in Philadelphia next ...
Legiant has adopted XML API technology in their newest release ñ Legiant Timecard V10.2 Legiant, a provider of automated time and attendance systems, has adopted XML API technology in their newest ...
Extensible Markup Language accomplished the seemingly impossible this year: It brought bitter software enemies together to speak the same tongue. Rivals such as Microsoft, Oracle and IBM flooded the ...