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Client Server Listings
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19 | Displaying: 11 - 19 | Pages: << 1 2 |
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Client-server technology developed as applications were decentralized from PCs and mainframe computers. Desktop computers were connected through a network or LANs (Local Area Networks) and WANs (Wide Area Networks). In this equation, ‘clients’ are the machines or programs that request services from another machine or server on the network. The server is linked to databases or the Web and performs the processing of the request and the delivery of the response.
Price: Free - Updated: 08/12/2007
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In web applications, client-side programming is usually written in HTML meanwhile the application servers, the middle tier in three-tier client/server architecture, are usually written in C++ or Java. By using a scripting language embedded in HTML, web servers act as translation layers that allow for communication between the client and server layers. Application servers perform the in-house work of analyzing site traffic and creating personalized pages based on dynamic data such as user history and behavior on previous visits to web sites.
Price: Free - Updated: 07/15/2007
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When discussing client-server technology it is important to understand UNIX, one of the first, primary building blocks for network possibilities that continues its influence today. UNIX is an operating system designed for multi-tasking by multiple users. This description alone suggests the exponential increase in work productivity by networking through UNIX. Operating systems (OSs) are computers’ central program. Every computer has one.
Price: Free - Updated: 07/15/2007
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Middleware is the connective layer in client-server models. The multi-vendor software is compiled by designers to enable services that allow multiple machines to process multiple requests and interact across a network. It also allows communication across platforms. It is like a translation layer that liberates the client-server model by allowing it to communicate more freely across platforms and networks in standardized languages comprehensible across software or hardware differences.
Price: Free - Updated: 07/15/2007
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How to Use Client Servers in the Business Environment This article will discuss the Butler pyramid model of client-server computing in an attempt to provide a metaphor for understanding the most effective way of using client-server resources in a business environment. This five-layered model is also known as the Butler Group VAL (Value Added Layers) Model.
Price: Free - Updated: 07/15/2007
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Client-server software architecture is versatile and flexible in today’s fast-changing IT landscape. It is modular in structure and relies on messaging services for communication between components. They were designed to improve flexibility, usability, scalability, and interoperability. Software flexibility implies the ability for a program to change easily according to different users and different system requirements.
Price: Free - Updated: 07/15/2007
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Client-server computing is organized to support accessibility and integration. Through networking each client or workstation connected to the host or server. This allows clients to access software and hardware applications as needed. One of the primary benefits of this is the integration of software or hardware products from different vendors. These products, contained and accessible on the server, can work together to produce the business benefits of client-server technology such as cost reduction, increased flexibility and productivity, and more efficient utilization of resources.
Price: Free - Updated: 07/15/2007
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Web Server Introduction Web servers are the machines or programs from which requests are made and fulfilled over the Internet. They provide one of the endpoints in communication when users request an online service.
Price: Free - Updated: 07/15/2007
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Web Server Communication Web servers are one of the endpoints in communication through the World Wide Web. According to its inventor, Tim Berner-Lee, the World Wide Web is “the universe of network-accessible information, an embodiment of human knowledge.” While the latter part of this definition is arguable, the former offers a starting point through which to understand the magnitude of the Web.
Price: Free - Updated: 07/15/2007
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Client Server Listings
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Total:
19 | Displaying: 11 - 19 | Pages: << 1 2 |
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