In time, variations on Microsoft’s DDE were developed by some of the leading vendors in the market. However, this did not stop DDE from becoming dominant client/server architecture, largely due to its availability in most windows applications. DDE was not designed for the industrial market it lacked much of the speed and robustness desired in an industrial setting. ![]() DDE did provide a basic architecture that would allow many windows applications from a wide range of vendors to share data, but there was one problem. Early in the development of windows Microsoft provided a generic client server technology called DDE or Dynamic Data Exchange. In many cases these proprietary client/server architectures were in wide use but remained unavailable to third party applications. Initially some of these technologies were proprietary. In the industrial segment many client/server technologies have been developed over the last ten years. ![]() Regardless of the business segment served, client/server applications have one thing in common, a standardized method of sharing data.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |