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Web services find way to devices

New Web services technology makes it easier for users to connect devices over a network

By Joris Evers, IDG News Service
May 05, 2004
 

Microsoft Corp., Intel Corp., Lexmark International Inc. and Ricoh Co. Ltd. on Tuesday detailed new Web services technology designed to make it easier for users to connect devices such as printers, digital cameras and digital music players over a network.

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The companies at Microsoft's Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) officially announced a Devices Profile for Web services, which describes how devices should use Web services protocols. The announcement builds on WS-Discovery, a Web services specification that Microsoft, Intel, Canon Inc. and BEA Systems Inc. introduced in February. WS-Discovery describes a way for devices to find and connect to Web services.

The plan to use Web services to connect peripherals to computers is a change from the current use of Web services as a technology to connect business software across corporate networks or the Internet. At WinHEC in Seattle, Microsoft announced a Network Connected Device Driver Development Kit (DDK) for the technology and said Canon and Hewlett-Packard Co. will showcase printers supporting Web services protocols at the event.

Devices that use the new technology will automatically be discovered when connected to a home or company network and can subsequently be installed using the Windows plug and play subsystem as if connected directly to a PC, Microsoft said in a statement.

Tying devices together today is too complicated, especially if those devices are networked, said Jim Allchin, group vice president for Microsoft's platforms group, in a keynote presentation. "If you take a device that is on a local connection and plug it in, we've made a lot of progress with plug and play, but, if you actually have a device across the net, that is .... super hard. And it's a different experience to the end user," he said.

Furthermore, UPnP (Universal Plug and Play) 1.x used today is not enterprise ready, according to Allchin. Microsoft and the other developers of the Devices Profile plan to propose it to the UPnP Forum for consideration as the basis for the UPnP 2.0 Device Architecture before the end of the year, he said.

Enabling devices to connect using Web services will be beneficial for both home and business users, according to the technology's backers. For example, when connecting a large printer in an enterprise today, an IT department has to manually set up the print server so it knows the features of the printer, such as a document feeder and sorting capabilities. The Device Profile can take care of that, said Peter McKiernan, a lead product manager at Microsoft in an interview.

Lexmark plans to create devices profiles for its networked products, said Don Wright, director of alliances and standards at Lexmark in Lexington, Kentucky. "We will be able to learn in a standard way that the device is present, who is authorized to use it and what its capabilities are," he said. "All of that functionality will be automated and relieve the IT manager from spending time driving around his enterprise configuring every new device that gets plugged into the network."

Assuming all goes well with the process of getting approval by the UPnP Forum, the first devices using the technology could be out in the 2006 or 2007 timeframe, said Stephen Whalley, technology enabling manager at Intel.

 





 

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