Jarl, I agree that SOAP is the hottest integration technology when it comes to sharing data between enterprises, but I think there are still cases where in-house you might want the tighter integration and sheer convenience an ARDBC JDBC plug-in could give you.
It's astonishing how many organizations are still, after all these years, relying on nightly CSV dumps from external databases. Where's that single, enterprise-wide, federated, distributed database they promised us back in the 90's? And where's my flying car??? --Tim --- Jarl Grøneng <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, > > For me it would be nice 5-10 years ago, but today almost all of the > integration are done aplication - application(and also trough > middleware), and not to the databases. SOAP and J2EE rules the > integration at the moment... > > -- > Jarl > > On 9/8/07, Axton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > With the new java based plugin server introduced in 7.1, can I get a > > show of hands in who would the interested in a jdbc driver implemented > > as an ARDBC plugin? > > > > Seems that a generic implementation would allow access to any remote > > db that provides a jdbc driver (Oracle, MSSQL, MySQL, LDAP, MS Access, > > SQLLite, PostgreSQL, Domino, DB2, etc.). > > > > Seems the targets could be almost endless. > > > > Axton Grams > > > > > _______________________________________________________________________________ > > UNSUBSCRIBE or access ARSlist Archives at www.arslist.org ARSlist:"Where > the Answers Are" > > > > _______________________________________________________________________________ > UNSUBSCRIBE or access ARSlist Archives at www.arslist.org ARSlist:"Where the > Answers Are" > _______________________________________________________________________________ UNSUBSCRIBE or access ARSlist Archives at www.arslist.org ARSlist:"Where the Answers Are"

