What Is Web Services Interoperability Organization (WS-I)?
The idea behind WS-I is simple: if you want something to be interoperable (or "open"), you must test it first! You can't just say, "let's make this open," and expect it to work with everything else. You have to try it against everyone else's stuff before considering calling something "open."The WS-I defines interoperability as "the ability of two or more systems or applications from different vendors to exchange information in a way that enables each system or application to use the received information as if it originated from an authorized source. " In other words, any system or application should be able to use data from any different design or application without any problems occurring during the transmission or processing of data between systems/applications. The WS-I was founded through a proposal by Microsoft and IBM. It's an open community where companies can come together to discuss technical issues related to Web services and how best practice standards can be developed for them to work seamlessly together. The Web Services Interoperability Organization is an open industry organization dedicated to ensuring your web services are as interoperable as possible. The WS-I isn't just about creating standards—they believe in the importance of best practices, so they create profiles and support testing tools based on those best practices for selected Web services standards. The shapes and testing tools are then made available for anyone to use, particularly by the Web services community, to aid in developing and deploying interoperable Web services. You've heard of the Web Services Interoperability (WS-I) profile. It's a collection of named Web services specifications at specific revision levels collectively with the implementation and guidelines that would help advise how these may be used. However, since WS-I is not a certification authority, companies can claim that their products are WS-I compliant as long as they have used WS-I's test tools. Though a company can falsely claim its compliance, it would be in its best interest not to because that would likely backfire on them. Additionally, being interoperable with other Web services is already a benefit. WS-I: The glue that keeps your Web services together.
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