IBM, MS, Sun Promote Web Services Specs
By Jay Lyman
TechNewsWorld
08/11/04 12:53 PM PT
Yankee Group senior analyst Dana Gardner said standards, interoperability and adoption of Web services all rely on each other, but standards are most important at this point. "Web services really depends on interoperability, and that comes from standards, so it's really an ongoing march. You never really reach the destination, but you get closer," Gardner told TechNewsWorld.

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Promoting Interoperability
In a statement, the WS-Addressing backers said, "With a standard way to express where a message should be delivered in a
Web services network
, developers are able to simplify Web services
communication and development and avoid the need to develop costly, ad
hoc solutions that are often difficult to interoperate across
platforms."
The spec represents one of the foundational components to reliable and
interoperable Web services. It has the backing of Microsoft, IBM and -- following its recent truce with Redmond -- Sun Microsystems (Nasdaq: JAVA)
.
Sholler told TechNewsWorld that there is already significant deployment of Web services, with many companies taking base specs such as WS-Addressing and building to their own requirements. He added that the overall status of Web services is advancing, with significant gains in security and other key
areas.
Collaboration of MS, IBM, Sun
Yankee Group senior analyst Dana Gardner said standards,
interoperability and adoption of Web services all rely on each other,
but standards are most important at this point.
"Web services really depends on interoperability, and that comes from
standards, so it's really an ongoing march. You never really reach the
destination, but you get closer," Gardner told TechNewsWorld.
Gardner added that choreography and the ability to assemble services
into a business process, workflow or aggregated interface represents the
next level for Web services.
The WS-Addressing backers called the joint submission of the spec to W3C
"a milestone" in collaboration.
Sun Signs On
While its recent end to hostilities with Microsoft may have played a
role in Sun's signing onto the WS-Addressing spec -- despite previously
promoting its own, separate Web services specification -- Sun had little
choice, according to Sholler.
"Sun suffered a bit," he said. "It continued [to work on another spec]
long after the shape of this thing was fairly well established in
peoples' minds."
Sholler added that while all of the industry players' support is
important, the bulk of the push has come from rivals IBM and Microsoft.
"It's been clear for some time that [this] collection of [Web] services has been one built out of the IBM-Microsoft relationship," Sholler said.