| Category: Enterprise Services ("COM+") | | |
4 Articles found and displayed in this view.
- Practical Messaging Scenarios with WCF 4
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2010 Sep/Oct Release Date: Friday, August 20, 2010
Quick ID: 1009051
- Preparing for Indigo - Choosing the Right Technology Today
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2005 - Mar/Apr Release Date: Friday, February 18, 2005
Quick ID: 0503031
Indigo is the next generation application connectivity and services from Microsoft, superseding the variety of .NET connectivity solutions available today: ASMX Web services, Remoting, and Enterprise Services. Since .NET debuted some five years ago, all three technologies have been inundated in either hype or misconceptions. With Indigo around the corner, it is time to take a long hard look at these three technologies, and separate fact from myth so that you will be best prepared for Indigo. This article starts by examining the existing technologies, describing their merits and shortcomings, putting them in the correct perspective of a modern distributed application, and suggests where to best apply them. Then the article briefly describes the Indigo programming model, and assesses how to best mitigate the cost of the migration.
- COM+ Queued Components
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2000 - Fall Release Date: Sunday, October 15, 2000
Quick ID: 0003021
Automatic asynchronous messaging is an important technique for scalable, component-based applications.Microsoft provided its first asynchronous messaging mechanism in the form of Microsoft Message Queue Server (MSMQ). This technology is the basis for Queued Components, a COM+ feature that makes asynchronous messaging as simple as calling regular COM Components.
- Loosely Coupled Events With COM+
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2000 - Spring Release Date: Saturday, April 15, 2000
Quick ID: 0001021
COM+ introduces a new way to architect and extend applications:The COM+ Event Service. This service is extremely flexible and much easier to handle and maintain than all other COM based event models we've seen so far. They are especially useful for business events that can now be published throughout the system without losing any control over business rules.
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