XML Application Development
Cyber Futuristics has the experience and the technical know how to
assist you in web designing, developing and deploying open standard
infrastructure solutions based on XML and related standards.
XML is the fastest evolving technology for Web Applications. To
address the requirements of commercial Web publishing and enable the
further expansion of Web technology into new domains of distributed
document processing, the World Wide Web Consortium has developed an
Extensible Markup Language (XML) for applications that require
functionality beyond the current Hypertext Markup Language (HTML).
XML is a universal language for data on the Web that lets developers
deliver content from a wide variety of applications to the desktop.
XML promises to standardize the way information is searched for,
exchanged, adaptively presented, and personalized.
Data such as customer information, credit card transactions, purchase
orders, and fulfillment requests can be converted to XML and shared
across applications without changing legacy systems. XML can be used
to exchange data between Web server and browser or between trading
partners without the existing systems needing any prior description of
the data's structure.
XML Applications Areas:
The applications that drive the acceptance of XML are those that
cannot be accomplished within the limitations of HTML.
These applications can be divided into three broad categories:
- Applications that require the Web client to mediate between two or more heterogeneous databases.
- Applications that attempt to distribute a significant proportion of the processing load from the Web server to the Web client.
- Applications that require the Web client to present different views
of the same data to different users.
1. Use of XML for data transfer
2. Use of XML for data distribution
3. For publication of data
4. For offline/online data synchronization
5. Enable internationalized media-independent electronic publishing
6. Allow industries to define platform-independent protocols for the exchange of data, especially
the data of electronic commerce
7. Deliver information to user agents in a form that allows automatic processing after receipt
8. Make it easier to develop software to handle specialized information distributed over the Web
9. Make it easy for people to process data using inexpensive software
10. Allow people to display information the way they want it, under style sheet control
11. Make it easier to provide metadata -- data about information -- that will help people find
information and help information producers and consumers find each other.
Intranet applications that work across databases, especially where policies must be enforced: purchase orders, expense requests, etc.











