Sweet, thanks for the information. I will do that
tonight and see what good
features it has.


-----Original Message-----
From: Unmoderated discussion of advanced .NET topics.
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Erick Thompson
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2005 4:06 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ADVANCED-DOTNET] Anyone have experience
using DIME?

I would highly recommend moving to WSE3. It's worlds
ahead of WSE2 and
has DIME support built in. In addition, the policy
model is much cleaner
and it will upgrade to indigo.

Erick

-----Original Message-----
From: Unmoderated discussion of advanced .NET topics.
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Steve Welborn
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2005 12:28 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ADVANCED-DOTNET] Anyone have experience
using DIME?

Hi Erick,

       Yes I am using WSE2 SP2 right now. What I was
trying to do was
see if I could use DIME to transfer files from one
client to another
client. Either passing through the webservice to a
client or just
straight to the client.
Doesn't seem like I can unless you have some
suggestions.

  Thanks for the reply,
         Steve

-----Original Message-----
From: Unmoderated discussion of advanced .NET topics.
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Erick Thompson
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2005 1:45 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ADVANCED-DOTNET] Anyone have experience
using DIME?

I was out of the office, and just noticed this thread.

Are you using WSE? WSE3 has DIME built in, and you can
turn it on with a
flag in the config file. Very easy to use, and it will
automatically be
used anywhere a byte array is being sent.

Erick

-----Original Message-----
From: Unmoderated discussion of advanced .NET topics.
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of J. Merrill
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2005 8:36 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ADVANCED-DOTNET] Anyone have experience
using DIME?

At 09:57 AM 6/17/2005, Angela Tocco wrote (in part)
>The trick is I cant use sockets because the
application is using .Net
>Remoting and it has to be able to go through port 80,
outbound only.

If you have two clients that are each restricted to
"outbound only"
(regardless of port restrictions), they won't be able
to talk to each
other -- neither can accept a connection from the
other so there's no
way to establish a direct connection.  That has
nothing to do with .Net
or DIME or anything; it's just TCP/IP.  You need a
server to stand in
the middle.  (How could the two clients learn about
each other?  If each
communicates with the server, then there's a place to
hold the list of
all clients; without that...)

If all you're doing is uploading and downloading
files, perhaps you
should just use FTP.

Good luck.  (BTW, why are messages from "Angela Tocco"
signed "Steve"?)

J. Merrill / Analytical Software Corp

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