Windows Open Services Architecture
Windows Open Services Architecture (WOSA) is a set of proprietary Microsoft technologies intended to "...provide a single, open-ended interface to enterprise computing environments.".[1] WOSA was announced by Microsoft in 1992.[2] WOSA was pitched as a set of programming interfaces designed to provide application interoperability across the Windows environment.
The set of technologies that were part of he WOSA initiative include:[3]
- LSAPI (Software Licensing API)
- MAPI (Mail Application Programming Interface)
- ODBC[4] (Open Database Connectivity)
- OLE for Process Control
- SAPI (Speech Application Programming Interface)
- TAPI (Telelphony Application Programming Interface)
- Windows SNA (IBM SNA Networks)
- WOSA/XFS (WOSA for Financial Services)
- (WOSA for Real-time Market Data)
See also[]
- Component Object Model
- Object Linking and Embedding
References[]
- ^ overview PDF
- ^ "Infoworld March 9, 1992". Computer Business Review. 1992-02-26. Retrieved 2020-01-30.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Definition of WOSA". PCMAG. Retrieved 2020-01-30.
- ^ corob-msft. "ODBC Basics". docs.microsoft.com. Retrieved 2020-01-30.
External links[]
Categories:
- Inter-process communication
- Windows communication and services
- Architectural pattern (computer science)
- Enterprise application integration
- Service-oriented (business computing)
- Web services
- Component-based software engineering