␡
- J2EE Clients
- Types of J2EE Clients
- Servicing Stand-alone Java Client Applications
- Servicing EJB Clients from Other J2EE/EJB Servers
- Servicing CORBA clients from CORBA Object Request Brokers
- Servicing Legacy System Clients (ERP/CRM/Mainframes)
- Servicing JMS Clients
- Servicing Windows/.Net Clients
- Servicing Web service client
- Servicing Clients from Other Environments
- Conclusions
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Servicing Windows/.Net Clients
Prior to the introduction of the .Net framework, there were limited attempts to expose Enterprise Java beans to native Windows application calls directly by means of Java client access services (CAS). But after the advent of .Net, the focus has drifted slightly away from CAS. Now, architects are looking at better ways to interact between the two environments by means of vendor-neutral standards and Web service technologies.