Podcasts about ws policy

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Best podcasts about ws policy

Latest podcast episodes about ws policy

Enterprise Java Newscast
Episode 16 - Jul 2013

Enterprise Java Newscast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2013 79:01


Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from SpringSource, PrimeFaces, ICEsoft, JBoss, IBM, Oracle, and TypeSafe. They also try out recording the newscast using Google Hangouts instead of Skype. New Releases   Spring News Spring-AMQP 1.2.0 Release Candidate is Now Available! Spring Social Facebook 1.0.3 Released Spring XD 1.0 Milestone 1 Released SPRING BATCH 2.2.0.RELEASE IS NOW AVAILABLE SPRING TOOL SUITE AND GROOVY/GRAILS TOOL SUITE 3.3.0.M2 RELEASED Spring Integration 3.0 milestone 2 TcServer 2.9.2 is now available PrimeFaces PrimeFaces Starter Book JSF 2.2 Pass Through Attributes New Component: Fragment Show Message in a Dialog Dialog Framework PrimeFaces Elite 3.5.7 Released ICEsoft ICEmobile 1.3 released Apache Apache Archiva 1.4-M4 released Apache PDFBox 1.8.2 released Apache Jackrabbit 2.6.2 released Apache S4 0.6.0-incubating release Apache Chemistry OpenCMIS 0.9.0 released MyFaces Core v2.1.12 Release Apache CloudStack 4.1.0 Released Apache Log4j-2.0-beta7 released Apache Nutch 2.2 Released Apache Tomcat 7.0.41 released Apache Commons NET 3.3 released Apache Traffic Server 3.3.4-dev is released Apache HttpComponents HttpClient 4.3-beta2 released Apache Qpid 0.22 released Apache Syncope 1.1.2 released Apache Subversion 1.8.0 Released Apache Lucene 4.3.1 released Apache Solr 4.3.1 released Apache jclouds 1.6.1-incubating released Apache Portable Runtime library 1.4.8 Released Apache Hama 0.6.2 has been released. Apache Camel 2.10.5 released Apache CouchDB 1.3.1 released Apache Kafka 0.8.0-beta1 Released Apache ODF Toolkit 0.6-incubating released JBoss Better maven integration with the Byteman 2.1.3 release JBossWS 4.2.0.CR1 and the WS-Policy sets Infinispan 5.3.0.Final is out! Forge 1.3.2.Final Released RHQ 4.8 released AeroGear.js 1.1.0 Release Arquillian TestRunner Spock 1.0.0.Beta1 Released Arquillian Warp 1.0.0.Alpha3 Released GridLogZ: In-Memory Log Analysis RichFaces 5.0.0.Alpha1 Release Announcement Arquillian Google Guice Extension 1.0.0.Alpha1 Released Arquillian Spring Framework Extension 1.0.0.Beta2 Released Oracle Arun Gupta: Eclipse 4.1 Kepler released Java 7 Update 25 released - 40 security holes patched Java EE 7 Released Java EE 7 (Oracle Press Release) JSF2.2 and HTML5 Article on Infoq Java EE 7 Introduces WebSocket Support GlassFish 4 Released GlassFish 4 Release Notes (PDF) IBM WebSphere Application Server and Developer Tools V8.5.5 available now Scala Takipi released Typesafe Activator 0.2.1 Released Slick 1.0.1 release Events No Fluff Just Stuff ScalaSummit, Crested Butte, Colorado August 19 - 21, 2013 JavaZone, Oslo, Norway Sep 11-12 JavaOne, San Francisco Sep 22-26 Devoxx Belgium, Antwerp November 11-15 jDays, Gothenburg, Sweden (Call for Papers ends Aug 25th) Nov 26-27

Web Directions Podcast
Mark Nottingham - Browser Caching and You (A Love Story)

Web Directions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2010 37:46


Over time, Web developers have feared, hated and loved Web caching, at times trying to kill it, at others professing undying love. Mark Nottingham (chair of the IETF HTTPbis Working Group and author of its revised Web Caching specification) will examine how browsers (mis)-treat your content today, as well as where your relationship with browser caching might go in the future. Mark Nottingham is a Principal Technical Yahoo!, putting together Web-based infrastructure for sites like Yahoo! Finance, Sports, Tech, TV and Movies. He has spent the last fifteen years designing, debugging, serving and caching Web content, with past stints at Merrill Lynch, Akamai and BEA Systems, along with scars from writing specifications like the Atom Syndication Format, WS-Policy and the WS-I Basic Profile, and chairing both IETF and W3C Working Groups. Right now, his focus is on using HTTP for what the rest of the industry calls Web Services. Past occupations have included being a photojournalist, Volkswagen mechanic, graphic designer, Webmaster, developer, systems administrator, research scientist, standards expert and all-around Web technology guy. He’s married to Anitra, with two sons, Charlie and Bennet. They currently live in Melbourne, Australia. Follow Mark on Twitter: @mnot Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).

Layer 7 Technologies
A Practical Guide to Policy Authoring for SOA Governance

Layer 7 Technologies

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2007 58:51


This Webcast, presented by Layer 7 CTO and WS-Policy co-editor, Dr. Toufic Boubez, will cover how to declaratively define SOA Policy for SOA Governance applications. Consistent, standards based policy definition is the first step in implementing an SOA Governance framework. However, few tools exist for managing the policy authoring process and integrating it into the full policy lifecycle process including repository, approval workflow, enforcement, monitoring and change. Since successful policy definition lies at the heart of SOA security and SLA implementation it is essential in practice.

CERIAS Security Seminar Podcast
Rafae Bhatti, A Policy Engineering Framework for Federated Access Management

CERIAS Security Seminar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2006 48:37


Federated systems are an emerging paradigm for information sharing and integration. Such systems require access management policies that not only protect user privacy and resource security but also allow scalable and seamless interoperation. Current solutions to distributed access control generally fail to simultaneously address both dimensions of the problem. This talk describes the design of a policy-engineering framework, called xFederate, for specification and enforcement of access management policies in federated systems. It has been designed from the perspectives of both security management and software engineering to not only allow specification of requirements for federated access management but also allow development of standardized policy definitions and constructs that facilitate policy deployment and enforcement in a federated system. The framework also includes the design of an administrative model targeted at access control policy administration in a decentralized environment. Two profiles of the policy language, namely a SAML profile and a WS-Policy profile, have been developed to integrate the framework with industry standards for federation and policy-based management in the emerging Web services paradigm. The talk will include an online demo of a research prototype that illustrates the use of xFederate as an enabling technology for secure Web services with applications in federated digital libraries and federated electronic healthcare management. About the speaker: Rafae Bhatti is a PhD candidate in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and affiliated with the Center for Education and Reserach in Information Assurance and Security (CERIAS) at Purdue University. His research interests include information systems security, with emphasis on design and administration of access management policies in distributed systems. In his M.S. thesis research at Purdue, he developed an XML-based policy specification framework for distributed access control. His PhD research focuses on the access management problems posed by the emerging federated paradigm of information sharing and collaboration, and on specification of XML-based security protocols for Web-based information systems. His work on XML-based access control framework for the Role Based Access Control (RBAC) model have recently been cited by the OASIS consortium in their official announcement of the RBAC standard.

CERIAS Security Seminar Podcast
Rafae Bhatti, "A Policy Engineering Framework for Federated Access Management"

CERIAS Security Seminar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2006


Federated systems are an emerging paradigm for information sharing and integration. Such systems require access management policies that not only protect user privacy and resource security but also allow scalable and seamless interoperation. Current solutions to distributed access control generally fail to simultaneously address both dimensions of the problem. This talk describes the design of a policy-engineering framework, called xFederate, for specification and enforcement of access management policies in federated systems. It has been designed from the perspectives of both security management and software engineering to not only allow specification of requirements for federated access management but also allow development of standardized policy definitions and constructs that facilitate policy deployment and enforcement in a federated system. The framework also includes the design of an administrative model targeted at access control policy administration in a decentralized environment. Two profiles of the policy language, namely a SAML profile and a WS-Policy profile, have been developed to integrate the framework with industry standards for federation and policy-based management in the emerging Web services paradigm. The talk will include an online demo of a research prototype that illustrates the use of xFederate as an enabling technology for secure Web services with applications in federated digital libraries and federated electronic healthcare management.