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Many deep technical thoughts tonight about testpleasedelete.com, all of which make sense, and will lead to effective implementations of the necessary interfaces, both incoming and outgoing - it's HTTP and associated technologies that will win the day
And (sorry for shouting) NO SOAP!
All SOAP does is impose an exceedingly complex layer of stuff on top of what HTTP could do in the first place
When SOAP was first devised, I read all the relevant documents, and got into the XML-RPC-style of doing things (yes, I know XML-RPC and SOAP aren't the very same thing, but they are functionally equivalent), and I have to say, though I say it myself, that over the years I created some remarkable solutions for some very high-profile clients
But that was before I knew I was wrong - my solutions were correct, and they were even solving the right problems, but the problems themselves were the wrong problems - the same wrong problems that are, even as I type, being struggled with by people all over the world who know, inside themselves, that there must be a better way, but don't know what it is, and wouldn't be believed by their "superiors" if they discovered it, and explained it in the simplest terms
Anybody who works with wood will tell you that, for the most part, you should work with the grain.
The web is made of wood, and therein lies not only its strength, but also its resilience. Such things as SOAP and XML-RPC are attempts to treat it as if it's made of concrete sections, or nuts and bolts.
Oh, and BTW, this led directly to working out how to create a retrospective schedule of all the appearances of the Marching Band, including identifying who they've come out for, which tune they're playing, and who's booked them to play - because it hasn't been BI who's booked them every time
With the grain; that wins the day
And on that note I shall listen to some music from bands most of you are too young to have heard of, like Magazine, or the Comsat Angels
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