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Apache Axis 1.0 RC1 Available

spike666 writes "Apache Axis, the SAX based SOAP server which IBM is building into WebSphere, has hit 1.0RC1! Go download it now and get all SOAPy!"

16 comments

  1. Old news by roly · · Score: 0

    http://xml.apache.org/axis/
    "NEWS (Sept 6, 2002) : Axis 1.0 RC1 is now available!"

    You were 4 days late.

    --
    "With Microsoft, you get Windows. With Linux, you get the full house" - unknown
    1. Re:Old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you just lick Rick Austenson's ass, as depicted here.

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  2. Poor Apache... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It looks like the Apache Project is being added to the Micr^H^H^H^HUS Government "Axis of Evil" list. How soon will Ashcroft be ordering the site to be shutdown?

  3. What is SOAP useful for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK I have heard the term Simple Object Access Protocol kicked around a lot recently.

    What problems does it solve? Should I be searching for an O'Reilly book to read this weekend?

    1. Re:What is SOAP useful for? by roly · · Score: 0

      Yeah, what does SOAP do?

      --
      "With Microsoft, you get Windows. With Linux, you get the full house" - unknown
    2. Re:What is SOAP useful for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      SOAP is basically platform-independent RPC using XML. It is typically done over HTTP, although is could be done using SMTP, FTP, etc. (if you wanted to).

    3. Re:What is SOAP useful for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An XML API between computers across the internet. Considering that there isn't a strict format for transactions across the internet it's fairly important.

  4. Tutorial by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Alright I have heard alot about SOAP(yet know nothing, about SOAP that is), what is the best way to learn this stuff.
    Set up some servers and go at it, reading, some online tutorial.

    I know everyone has different ways of learning but some subjects are easier to learn differnet ways.

    thoughts?

    1. Re:Tutorial by steve_l · · Score: 2

      well, Search for 'Sam Ruby' on google to get his intro, and d/l chapter 15 of my ant book (http://manning.com/antbook) for the practicalities of doing apache SOAP work. Best book on Axis I've seen is the Sams press one; the Wrox book on axis is a bit more up to date (I havent seen it).

      To bring up axis you need to get axis.war into your app server, make sure happyaxis.jsp is happy. Then you can add new services by writing java files with .jws extension and dropping them into the expanded WAR. Each file becomes an endpoint where methods can be posted to. postRC1.0 (since last friday), axis has supported GET too.

  5. Stop the "Low Fat" and "No Meat" Lies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every where I go I'm inundated with low fat this, low fat that, no fat, no cholesterol, not meat, et al. It's been 20 years since the AMA dropped the bombshell that fat was killing us, and in spite of the absolute lack of information to back it up (and where it exists, lets call a spade a spade and admit that it was junk science at best). Everyone has been pushing this anti-fat nonsense, yet Americans are getting fatter and fatter, heart disease is on the up as is diabetes, and millions of Americans find that they can't control their cholesterol no matter how hard they try - and now they are on dangerous liver-killing drugs to try.

    When will America cast of this "fat is bad" myth, and accept that the real evil - the only evil - in our diets is all the processed crap and high sugar/carbs we consume? In 1910, the average American consumed roughly 1.5 lbs of sugar (and it was unrefined cane sugar at that). Heart disease wasn't even something most doctors knew about because people were dying of crap like tuberculosis and influenze far more often then from heart attacks. Fast forward to today: The average American consumes some 118 lbs of refined sugar. Food makers sell prepackaged foods which are highly profitable, chocked full of artificial flavors and colors, and made mostly from fillers. Labels like "low fat" and "no fat" make people salivate like pavlovian dogs when they think that it must be heart healthy, but eveyone is ignoring the obvious. Scientists still can't tell us precisely what roles cholesterol play, they can't agree on what is good, what is bad, and nobody has a clue on how cholesterol goes from lipids in the blood stream to plaque along the artery walls.

    And the diet fads: First we're told that vegetarianism is the way to go, but every vegetarian I've ever met has been relatively unremarkable in their health, and never any better off than before they made their "commitment". Then there are 'hollywood' diet plans that offer people the chance to lose gobs of weight in only weeks, but what they don't mention is that you'll gain all that weight back and then some.

    The only vegetarians/vegans I respect are the ones who go on the diet because of concerns about the treatment of food animals. There are alternatives: Nuts, vitamins, soy, etc. But outside of that, anyone who foreswears meat for 'health concerns' is a stark raving fool who is willfully depriving themselves of a number of essential amino acids needed to keep the body healthy. And before you go slathering that baby back ribs with gobs of barbecue sauce, look at how much sugar/sucrose/fructrose is in there. In fact, look at all your foods. If it has "ose", "ayse", or anything you can't pronounce you should toss it in the trash. People rave about the evil of sodium, but if you're drinking water and sweating, sodium is the least of your worries. Watch your intake of sugar and simple carbs. Ban yourself from white bread, cornbread, and anythign that isn't 100% whole grain. Walk straight pass the aisle with all the potato chips, pretend you did'nt even see the pastas, and get your ass into the produce section. If you want to be healthy, make sure there is not more than a few steps between you and your food. And for those of us still eating meat - know where your meat comes from. Free range, hormone free, non-corn-fed meat is the only way to go. And if you don't have a concience, consider this: stress causes animals to pump natural hormones out that make meat taste gamy. Make sure your meat comes from animals that lived happy, and died fast.

    One more thing (and I dont think anyone can disagree with this): Unplug yourself, put the remote down, and go OUT SIDE! You see that big burning ball of fire in the sky? That's called a sun. Try to expose yourself to it more often, it's a great source of vitamin D (not directly obviously). Here's a concept that works: RUN. Sweat. Give yourself some cramps somewhere besides your wrists for a change. Unless you want your legacy to be that you wrote somethign that got included in an obscure 8 digit release Linux kernal, then you died fat and alone in your one bedroom apartment in front of your computer while wearing only your underwear and clutching a twinkie in your left hand, you should excercise. Believe me, running a 100m dash in 10 seconds is just as satisfying as killing a bug in your source code.

    Okay, I'm done now...oh, and if any of you are wondering what inspired this rant, it was spending the first 24 years of my life as a fat out of shape and hypertensive stress ball. Since I saw through the lies, I have lost 130 lbs. I feel great, look great, I'm happy, and I actually get laid on occasion now. Oh yeah, some light reading [andrewkrause.org] on the subject from the New York Times (no registration required, put it helps to have Acrobat reader installed).

    1. Re:Stop the "Low Fat" and "No Meat" Lies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing worse than a reformed fat man on a pseudo-philosophical rampage.

      Go eat a twinkie and shut the hell up.

  6. Professional XML Web Services by DreamTheater · · Score: 1
    One great resource for learning about SOAP and XML Web Services is my book
    • Professional XML Web Services
    . Click here for more info.
    1. Re:Professional XML Web Services by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have that book, and i'd agree it's OK as an overview, but it doesn't realy go into focus on any one area. It's all over the place as to SOAP using java/perl/.NET etc. Alot of it XML schema definition fluff ( eg. here's the RFC of the entire UDDI Schema. Here's the WDSL schema )

      I guess it's my expectation level, but for one of the wrox professional series books, i was hoping for more real world examples, and less of "here's intro to SOAP using:"

      a) perl

      b)java

      c) python

      d) no of the above

      Another point worth noting, but shouldn't be held against it is that this book doesn't give a very good explanation of why and when you would want to use SOAP/Service Oriented Architecture Versus using plain old EJB,PHP, or ASP technology. People looking to get management buy in on Web Services are not going to get much help here.

      one minor nit to pick, and i know that this is common with most of the wrox books is that the appendix is commonly obtainable information. 100 of this 800 page book is the SOAP 1.1 RFC! I certainly would have prefered that the book was discounted by 1/8th rather than have all that fluff.

      The feeling that I got was that the book should have either been half as long ( more concise and cheaper ) or been twice as big ( more indepth and useful examples than the "hello world" ones that were given, and more real world Case Studies.

      anyway, that's my 2 cents.

  7. -1 Stupid Book Plug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lame