Application-oriented networking: Difference between revisions

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Merge in from Application-oriented networks following March 2013 proposal; see Talk:Application-oriented networking
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'''Application-oriented networking (AON)''' involves network devices designed to aid in computer-to-computer application integration.<ref>{{Cite web |title=What is an application network? |url=https://www.mulesoft.com/resources/api/what-is-an-application-network |access-date=2023-11-24 |website=MuleSoft |language=en}}</ref> '''Application-oriented networks''' are sometimes called "intelligent networks" or "content-based routing networks" and they are generally network technology that can use the content of a [[network packet]] or message to take some sort of action.
 
Application-oriented networking was popularized by [[Cisco Systems]] in response to increasing use of [[XML]] messaging (combined with related standards such as [[XSLT]], [[XPath]] and [[XQuery]]) to link miscellaneous applications, data sources and other computing assets. Most Application-Orientated Networks manipulate structured data based in a [[human-readable]] format like [[XML]].
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==See also==
*[[Enterprise Application Integration]]
 
== References ==
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==External links==