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December 2010 S M T W T F S « Jul 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Recent Posts
- Exchange Web Services Example – Part 4 – Subscriptions and Notifications
- Exchange Web Services Example – Part 3 – Exchange Impersonation
- OpenEdge GUI for .NET – Testing the Bridge
- Exchange Web Services Example – Part 2 – Creating Appointments
- Exchange Web Services Example – Part 1 – Introduction and Set up
- I can not believe how dumb #Vonage billing system is. Even #Earthlink was not this bad. 04:37:37 PM December 15, 2010 from web
- In one week in Seattle, I have found 7 restaurants that are better than the best LA has to offer!!! 06:19:18 AM December 05, 2010 from API
- At last! Back in Seattle with my family. We're finally settling in. 12:24:27 AM November 29, 2010 from API
- Finished my last day of work at DIRECTV today. What a great company! I am really going to miss the whole team. Exciting opportunity to come! 12:15:39 AM October 30, 2010 from LinkedIn
- Gotta love LA traffic... Just got rear-ended... Again!!! 04:05:47 PM September 13, 2010 from Twitter for BlackBerry®
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Exchange Web Services – Subscriptions and Notifications
Apr 26
Posted by Bruce Gruenbaum in Commentary, Exchange Web Services, Java, OpenClient, OpenEdge, OpenEdge AppServer, Web Development, n-tier Development | 10 Comments
It’s been a really busy week since I posted my first post on Exchange Web Services. I have learned a lot in that short period of time that I want to share with you. Whether you are an OpenEdge, Java or .NET developer, I think this post is going to have some information for all of you.
In my first post, I told you about the background story – I need to enable an OpenEdge CRM application to create, modify and delete calendar and task items in Microsoft Exchange. I also need Exchange to let me know any time a calendar or task item is changed so that I can update the OpenEdge database accordingly. Simple use cases.
When I left off last week, my next step was to get Exchange subscriptions working, and, boy, what a trip that has been.
Tags: .NET, C#, Dynamic OpenClient, EWS, Exchange EWS, Exchange Web Services, Java, Java 5, Java OpenClient, Microsoft Exchange 2007, OpenEdge, OpenEdge AppServer, OpenEdge OpenClient, Progress OpenClient