SOAP is being touted as a successor to CORBA and all other forms of middleware. However, it lacks many important features, such as security, transactions, and persistence. In addition, its ability to pass unhindered through firewalls can be seen as a security threat rather than an advantage.
Corba in France
2006 : Corba is here to stay
New : Ice versus Corba
Comparing Corba IIOP with SOAP
Comparing Web Services and Corba
Index
New features
- Objects by value
- Servlet intercommunication using Corba
- Java to Corba mapping
- Corba to .Net connection : IIOP.net
- Accessing a RMI/IIOP-based CORBA object with .NET remoting
- Interopérabilité entre .Net Remoting et Corba
- J2SE 1.4 breathes new life into the CORBA community, Part 1
- Part 1: Get started developing enterprise CORBA applications with the latest version of J2SE (August 2002)
Part 2: Gain code portability with the Portable Object Adapter (September 2002)
Part 3: Create enterprise-level apps with the POA (October 2002)
Part 4: Portable interceptors and the Interoperable Naming Service
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New : DDS (Data Distribution Service for Real-Time systems)
- DDS by RTI
- DDS by Doug Schmidt
- DDS Wiki
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Corba 3
Main locations
Commercial ORBs and related software
Free ORBs
OMG related technologies
Corba news
Related standards
CORBA domains
Applications
Nortel Congruity
Other
Domis project
Distributed objects
Bayou project at Xerox
SCOAP : Soap on Corba
Corba versus MPI
Tutorials
List of Middleware Tutorials by Doug Schmidt
LIFL in French
Using the real-time event service
Cours Corba in Ecole des mines in French
Implementing Distributed Systems with Java and CORBA
Real-time Corba
High performance Corba
Corba and MPI
White papers
JMS and Event Service mapping with Open Fusion
Rise and fall of Corba
Corba and Java : J2SE 1.4 and Java 5
Interoperable Naming Service
Corba and EJB
Integrate EJBs and Corba