Concurrency control and recovery in database systems
Concurrency control and recovery in database systems
CORBA distributed objects: using Orbix
CORBA distributed objects: using Orbix
Using Java Applets and Corba for Multi-User Distributed Applications
IEEE Internet Computing
Incremental maintenance for dynamic database-derived HTML pages in digital libraries
Proceedings of the seventh international conference on Information and knowledge management
Ontological Approach for Information Discovery in Internet Databases
Distributed and Parallel Databases
PUNCH: An architecture for Web-enabled wide-area network-computing
Cluster Computing
Supporting Dynamic Interactions among Web-Based Information Sources
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Design of universal personal computing using SDL
Computer Communications
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Applications that cross the boundaries of different computing machines, operating systems, and programming languages are increasingly the norm. As a result, the need for what might be called bridging technologies to develop software that works across heterogeneous environments has become more compelling. The Common Object Request Broker Architecture is one such technology that is both robust and commercially available. CORBA essentially describes how client applications can invoke operations on server objects using the services of an intermediary known as an Object Request Broker, or ORB. This article introduces CORBA by describing its key components. It then reviews the boundaries it helps to bridge. It concludes by comparing CORBA with a number of other bridging technologies available today