XML, the standardized format of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) aims to make application development and integration very simple. It is a data format and framework that has been adopted as the basis for information exchange by the software development community. It is so powerful that Microsoft developed their entire .NET platform around using XML.
It is simple to learn, flexible to use and easy to understand. It works with applications, the internet and databases and is platform independent meaning it can be used to share data between a variety of database and application types and formats.
Garth Schulte, the instructor for this series, details how XML came to life, why it is needed and how you can use it. This creates a very informative foundation of knowledge that will benefit programmers, administrators and engineers alike. If your job entails any type of interface with databases, connectivity of applications or transferring of information, you need to watch these videos.


LinuxCBT IPv6 Edition focuses exclusively on the burgeoning Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6).

Microsoft Improves Exchange Server for 2007 — The Learning Curve is Big, and The Benefits Are Too. Microsoft doesn't even allow an upgrade to Exchange Server 2007 from previous versions. Your only option is migrating your data to a fresh installation of Exchange 2007. There are many reasons for this including the change from 32-bit to 64-bit architecture — but the big takeaway is that Exchange 2007 is different.

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