Talk:Common Object Request Broker Architecture: Difference between revisions

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: I'd love to provide a status but I'm neither a member of the OMG nor do I work with CORBA at the moment (I did at my last job last month :-) What would you like the format to be? i.e. links to "current projects"? White papers? Conference references? New standards in process? [[User:Seaneparker|Seaneparker]] ([[User talk:Seaneparker|talk]]) 00:38, 17 November 2007 (UTC)
 
* CORBA is very much alive. There are many ongoing CORBA related specifications being created - especially where quality of service issues are important. Btw, do not believe any one talking about the rise and fall of CORBA, most such talks are led by those who are trying to create new specifications created by a handful of distributed computing engineers (compare that to CORBA created over nearly 2 decades by hundreds of distributed computing specialists and ___domain experts). False references in this wikipedia to articles like "rise and fall of CORBA" should be deleted as they are a partial view. If some one wants to add to encyclopaedic content they can do so using a neutral subject. Today (2008) CORBA is an essential part of mission critical telecom networks, some of the most popular GUIs (GNOME). Distributed computing platforms like J2EE actually use CORBA (IIOP) in their core. Several IPTV projects require a core infrastructure powered by CORBA. To summarize, CORBA is the most successful distributed computing standard ever created. It powers many of today's software applications. There many not be too many changes in core CORBA (it is a mature standard now) however OMG is actively working on new specs. When you play a distributed mobile game, you may not know who powers it (like CORBA), does not mean it is not there :-) <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/123.236.136.223|123.236.136.223]] ([[User talk:123.236.136.223|talk]]) 18:12, 17 June 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
* CORBA is very much alive. There are many ongoing CORBA related specifications being created - especially where quality of service
:: If anyone is listening, ''please'' come up with a new, STL-based C++ binding, ''à la'' [[Internet Communications Engine]]. I wouldn't need backwards compatibility. Thanks. —[[User:Fleminra|Fleminra]] ([[User talk:Fleminra|talk]]) 18:39, 17 June 2008 (UTC)
issues are important. Btw, do not believe any one talking about the rise and fall of CORBA, most such talks are led by those who are trying to create new specifications created by a handful of distributed computing engineers (compare that to CORBA created over nearly 2 decades by hundreds of distributed computing specialists and ___domain experts). False references in this wikipedia to articles like "rise and fall of CORBA" should be deleted as they are a partial view. If some one wants to add to encyclopaedic content they can do so using a neutral subject. Today (2008) CORBA is an essential part of mission critical telecom networks, some of the most popular GUIs (GNOME). Distributed computing platforms like J2EE actually use CORBA (IIOP) in their core. Several IPTV projects require a core infrastructure powered by CORBA. To summarize, CORBA is the most successful distributed computing standard ever created. It powers many of today's software applications. There many not be too many changes in core CORBA (it is a mature standard now) however OMG is actively working on new specs. When you play a distributed mobile game, you may not know who powers it (like CORBA), does not mean it is not there :-) <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/123.236.136.223|123.236.136.223]] ([[User talk:123.236.136.223|talk]]) 18:12, 17 June 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
 
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