Subject: RE: 2.4.1 requirements document
Quick comments on one point only. If these points have already been discussed, I apologize. I have trimmed the direct respondents to Duane and Scott. <duane> <scott> The "human interface" is not classified as an "API" per se, but rides on top of the registry and repository API. </scott> You are correct. API does infer Application interface. <scott> Java servlets, Perl and/or XSL could formulate the HTML to XML API transformation, and simple client/server technology (sockets, HTTP, etc.) could pass the data to the Registry. Requests to the registry could be passed on to the Repository as a proxy service to retrieve repository contents. </scott> This method still carries extra overhead for the client in terms of development. I have received numerous communiques indicating a concern for the actual costs for SME's. </duane> In what way do these technologies require client-side development? All of these technologies are server-side or browser-plug-in technologies. The main human interface problems in this scenario would be browser configuration and the ever-present web-site learning curve. -- Roger Glover Norstan Consulting * E-mail: Roger.Glover@NorstanConsulting.com * Office: (612) 352-5718 * FAX: (612) 238-5718
Powered by
eList eXpress LLC