Thank you.Your answer make me thinking it more clearly.It seems you have
good examples for illustrating this.Would you please to send me a copy.I'll
be very grateful for your aid.
>
> It works.  I have a prototype that has XML EJB beans that talk to
business
> object EJB beans.  The XML servlet talks to the XML EJB bean and the XSL
> servlet talks to the XML servlet in a servlet chain.
>
> Why the necessary complexity?
>
> XML EJB bean - other systems may wish to enter a conversation with my
> system as use XML as the protocol and an XML bean facilitates that
>
> XML servlet - again, other systems may wish to gain access to parts of my
> system but through a web server/servlet and they only want XML.
>
> XSL servlet - translate XML to HTML with a stylesheet. Thin clients such
as
> browser can communicate with my system with unnecessary downloads of
large
> Java applets.
>
> What is really nice about how it is setup is that depending on the
> application that wishes to enter a conversation with mine, I can provide
> the means.  Some examples include, an internal application such as a data
> connector that would connect mine with say, SAP R/3.  Another level would
> be supply chain integration over the public internet whereby my suppliers
> would talk to my system through the XML servlet. The final level would be
> thin-client browsers such as Netscape that could use my system through a
> combination of the XSL and XML servlets.
>
> Perry Hoekstra - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> -------------------------------------------------
> All that is Microsoft does not glitter,
> Not all those who wander are lost;
> The old AT&T Unix that is strong does not wither,
> Deep roots are not reached by frost.
>
> >From the ashes of Spec1170 a fire shall be woken,
> A light from the shadows shall spring;
> Renewed shall be the Unix OS that was broken,
> Linux shall be king.
>
>
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