| Category: REST | | |
6 Articles found and displayed in this view.
- Exploring the Bing API Using WCF
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2010 May/Jun Release Date: Friday, May 07, 2010
Quick ID: 1006091
The TV commercials took me and many others by surprise. A stream-of-conscienceless-style ad that had our brains struggling to catch up with the next topic that the next person blurted out. Funny enough, the bouncing from topic to topic by the actors in the commercial seem to be a familiar metaphor to anyone that has traversed search results at one time or another. And at the end, a familiar logo appears: Microsoft, followed by a not-so-familiar one: Bing.
- Using the Amazon Web Service SDK for .NET
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2010 Mar/Apr Release Date: Friday, February 12, 2010
Quick ID: 1003071
The richest set of cloud computing services comes from a little e-commerce company known as Amazon.com. Developers can access the Amazon Web Services (AWS) platform using numerous tools including the .NET platform.Amazon.com is a major player in the cloud computing space and has numerous services available to developers. In late 2009, Amazon released the AWS SDK for .NET. This article will demonstrate using the AWS SDK to create a custom backup service using the Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3).
- Chapter 1: RESTful Systems: Back to the Future
Magazine/Issue: Online CoDe Magazine, Book Excerpts Release Date: Monday, January 11, 2010
Quick ID: 090143
Developers are rapidly discovering the power of REST to simplify the development of even the most sophisticated Web services—and today’s .NET platform is packed with tools for effective REST development. Now, for the first time, there’s a complete, practical guide to building REST-based services with .NET development technologies.
- Post Mortem: Tower48 Software Escrow
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2009 Sep/Oct Release Date: Friday, August 21, 2009
Quick ID: 0909041
- Twitter Programming Using WCF & REST
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2009 Sep/Oct Release Date: Sunday, August 16, 2009
Quick ID: 0909061
Along with an easy site with which you can access your account, there are many really cool Twitter clients out there. This is thanks to an exposed API that you can use to access all of Twitter’s features. The great thing is that this API uses a technology that WCF has embraced completely; I’m talking about REST. Though you can certainly use straight network programming to access and update your Twitter account, why not use the technology that Microsoft has put all their eggs into as far as communications programming is concerned? Twitter is, after all, all about communicating, right?
- Programming Twittering with Visual Basic
Magazine/Issue: CoDe Magazine, 2009 Mar/Apr Release Date: Friday, February 27, 2009
Quick ID: 0903071
Social networking has reached critical mass. One unique social networking platform, Twitter, launched in March of 2006 and took the world by storm with its social networking and microblogging platform.The developers of Twitter had the forethought to provide a REST -based API. Numerous developers have used the REST-based API to build Twitter clients on dozens of different platforms. In this article I’ll demonstrate how to access Twitter using the .NET platform.
|  | |  |  |
 |
|
 |
“Lightning Fast”
– Redmond Mag |
 |
“Covers all data
sources” – eWeek |
|
 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
| • |
25+ fielded & full-text search options |
|
 |
| • |
dtSearch’s own document filters highlight hits in popular file types |
|
 |
| • |
Web Spider supports static & dynamic data |
|
 |
| • |
APIs for .NET, Java, C++, SQL, etc. |
|
 |
| • |
Win / Linux (64-bit & 32-bit) |
|
 |
| www.dtSearch.com |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|