From Application
Virtualization to Xen, a
round-up of the
virtualization themes &
topics being discussed in
NYC June 23-24, 2008 by
the world-class speaker
faculty at the 3rd
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo being held by
SYS-CON Events in The
Roosevelt Hotel, in
midtown Manhattan.
Conference in San
Francisco. Dvorak held
forth on a number of
topics, including the new
AMD/Intel lawsuit, the
viability of Java and
Sun, the value of (or
lack thereof) of
corporate PR, and whether
or not a new book about
Silicon Valley is really
worth reading.
According to Sean Walsh,
President and CEO of
Skyway Software, 'Our
Skyway Community is
thriving and our members
are very talented. We
truly look forward to
their RIAs submittals and
Skyway Builder extensions
and are excited that all
of the contributions will
benefit the entire Skyway
Community.' With Skyway
Builder CE, Java
developers get an open
source Eclipse-based
plugin that offers a
seamless blend of coding
and modeling for
delivering RIAs and Web
Services in Spring.
Unlike any other modeling
tool, Skyway Builder CE
provides comprehensive
modeling capabilities at
four distinct application
layers:
Weitzner brings 30 years
of publishing experience
to ZDE, starting in
editorial at Hearst
Business Communications
and moving over to the
business side at CMP
Media. As CMP Media COO
and CEO, he transformed
the company from a
print-centric publisher
focused on multiple
markets to a
technology-only
integrated media play
through organic
development and a rapid
fire series of
acquisitions.
You remember back in the
early days of video games
when there wasn't enough
capacity on the carts
themselves to support 30
hours of gameplay? What
was the solution to keep
you playing? They made
the games unbelievably
freaking difficult. Try
playing Kid Icarus now
after having played a
modern game and you'll
see that the game
introduces artificial
barriers and creates
needless blocks simply to
increase the amount of
time spent in the game.
If you're an MMO maker
and you charge a monthly
fee, the more time people
spend in your game the
more money you make.
Silverlight 2.0 kicks ass
and I can't wait to start
dropping more hardcore
blog posts regarding it.
Scott Guthrie's tutorials
are a fantastic place to
start. The issue I have,
however, is that all of
the tutorials assume you
have installed
Silverlight 2.0 tools for
VS 2008. There is a small
issue with that and I'm
not sure everyone's aware
of it.
The mouse was the
original idea of Doug
Engelbart who was the
head of the Augmentation
Research Center (ARC) at
Stanford Research
Institute. Engelbart's
philosophy is best
embodied, in my opinion,
in the design of another
device that he invented,
the five-finger keyboard
- with keys like a piano,
used by one hand. The
problem was, Engelbart's
five-finger keyboard and
mouse combination was
very difficult to learn.
Told ya Adobe was gonna
reorganize and put its
mobile/devices operation
in with its platform
operation in the name of
moving to a single
technology platform and
runtime for PCs, handsets
and consumer devices.
Adobe's new CTO Kevin
Lynch, the creator of
AIR, is basically in
charge of the whole
magilla now. Gary Kovacs,
VP of product management
and marketing for the
mobile and devices
business, will be general
manager of the unit,
reporting to Lynch,
replacing Al Ramadan, who
is leaving.
Brightcove announced
distribution partnerships
with Bebo, Meebo,
RockYou, Slide and Veoh,
giving media companies
new opportunities to
expand the reach of their
online video, while
maintaining control over
their content and
advertising inventory.
Now media companies using
the Brightcove Internet
TV platform can program
and syndicate
advertising-supported
content into social
networks, social media
applications, and online
video destination.
Friday morning the local
Fox television station in
New York City broke the
news - Apple was suing
New York City. Six out of
100 of their viewers
thought Apple had the
right to sue the City,
but 94 out of 100 viewers
are now calling for New
Yorkers to drop Apple and
its products, including
the iPhone and Macs. New
Yorkers are pissed off!
New York City,
universally known as The
Big Apple, is facing a
lawsuit from Steve Jobs'
Apple Computer Inc. for,
of all things, copyright
infringement.
This was the first time
I've included into the
list of the RIA players a
little known product
called Curl. Even though
this language was created
in MIT, it's mainly used
in Japan. I had a chance
to spend an hour with
Curl folks today, and it
seems that this language
may be a good fit for RIA
that require solid
processing power on the
client. I need to spend
more time studying this
language to form an
opinion about this
language Curl.
Adobe has put an alpha
pre-release of AIR for
Linux up in hopes, it
says, of getting feedback
from the community, not
to mention winning
adherents. It's
English-only. The company
also joined the Linux
Foundation to encourage
the growth of RIA
technologies on Linux, it
said. The company says
Linux developers can use
HTML, AJAX, Flash and
Flex to build rich
Internet applications
(RIAs) that deploy to
desktops across operating
systems.
If you're like me, you've
probably been spending
every waking moment you
have eating, living, and
breathing the iPhone SDK.
Since March 6th, that's
pretty much all I can
think about once I get
home. So, what do you do
if you want to learn how
to write iPhone apps, but
you want to become a pro
at iPhone SDK
programming? Its one
thing to read the SDK,
page-by-page until your
eyes bleed (what I do for
fun), but most people
like to hang out with
other developers, get
hands on, do labs, see
demos, and generally get
their hands dirty.
2008 is going to be an
important year for Rich
Internet Applications.
Most organizations are
delivering or planning to
deliver Rich Internet
Applications; however, at
the same time, most IT
managers are facing a
dilemma: which Rich
Internet Application
technology and platform
to use? The number of
different frameworks and
libraries is too vast to
even consider evaluating
a fraction of them.
'Unlocking content to be
remixed into new business
value' is the driver of
Web 2.0 in the
enterprise, says Rod
Smith, IBM VP of Emerging
Internet Technologies, in
this Exclusive Q&A with
Jeremy Geelan on the
occasion of IBM's release
of a new technology
created by IBM
researchers, codenamed
'SMash' - short for
Secure Mashup.
Outbid by Verizon
Wireless in the great
American airwaves auction
last week, Google plunked
a six-page letter on the
Federal Communication
Commission's desk asking
the government to make
the 'white spaces' - the
airspace between TV
channels - available for
unlicensed wireless data
use by mobile devices.
The notion is backed by
Microsoft, Intel, HP,
Dell and the North
American arm of Philips
Electronics, a k a the
White Space Coalition,
and opposed by
broadcasters on the
theory that it's going to
interfere with TV
reception.
Here is a question that I
have been pondering on
and off for quite a
while: Why do 'cool kids'
choose Ruby or PHP to
build websites instead of
Java? I have to admit
that I do not have an
answer. Why do I even
care? Because I am a Java
developer. Like many Java
developers, I get along
with Java well. Not only
the language itself, but
the development
environments (Eclipse for
example), step-by-step
debugging helper, wide
availability of libraries
and code snippets, and
the readily accessible
information on almost any
technical question I may
have on Java via Google.
Last but not least, I go
to JavaOne and see 10,000
people that talk and walk
just like me.
Apple's iPhone is a
massive hit; the company
has sold millions of
handsets since the
product's launch in June
2007. Within weeks of the
iPhone hitting the
market, the first of
several highly publicized
security exploits, a
Trojan virus targeting
the device, was
identified. SMobile
Systems has announced
that it has ported its
signature application
suite, Security Shield,
to the iPhone, utilizing
the recently released
Apple Software
Development Kit (SDK).
Fast-spreading rich
Internet applications
require new skills for
development of what was
known as boring-looking
enterprise applications.
In the past, development
of the user interface was
done by software
developers to the best of
their design abilities. A
couple of buttons here, a
grid there, gray
background. Their users
were happy because they
did not see any better.
This is about to
change...
I want to thank everyone
who showed up to share my
enthusiasm for the iPhone
as it is, what I believe,
the mobile development
platform to target. I
also want to thank those
people who tolerated my
evasiveness and lack of
detail during the SDK
session. As I've said
before, just because
everybody else on the
internet has no problem
violating NDAs, when I
click 'Agree', I know
what I am agreeing to and
I intend to stick to that
agreement.
The F2F meeting of
OpenAjax Alliance at NYC
on March 21st worked out
really well in my
oppinion. As a result of
the last F2F meeting in
October 2007, we formed a
new task force called
'Runtime Advocacy Task
Force' at OpenAjax. The
goal of Runtime Task
Force is to collect a
'wish list' from the Ajax
community, get the
communities involved,
have active dialogs and
engage browser vendors,
with the goal of fixing
the issues that have
bugged down Ajax
developers and help build
a better web. So far
we've collected a list of
29 issues, of which we
hope to open up to the
general public for
review/comments/voting.
During the Q&A period
after one of my sessions
at the iPhone Developer
Summit last Thursday,
there was someone there
from Microsoft
Competetive Intelligence.
She asked myself and some
other folks who were
lingering nearby to
describe, in our unbiased
opinions, what we thought
was wrong with Windows
Mobile.
Sybase iAnywhere
announced availability of
support for Apple iPhone
during the first
international iPhone
Developer Summit,
colocated with AJAXWorld
Conference & Expo 2008
East. Information
Anywhere now enables IT
organizations to provide
secure delivery of Lotus
Domino and Microsoft
Exchange enterprise email
to iPhone users, in
addition to a broad range
of other mobile devices.
Sybase iAnywhere?s unique
approach to providing
enterprise email support
for the iPhone reduces
potential security
concerns while still
providing a rich user
experience utilizing
native iPhone
applications.
This session will provide
attendees with an
overview of the iPhone
SDK, including discussion
of the App Store, Apple's
planned distribution
channel for SDK
applications. Keep in
mind that the contents of
the SDK and experiences
while using it are
covered under NDA, so be
prepared for me to talk
in generics and leave out
specific details that
might be covered by the
NDA. I am planning on
providing a quick
introduction to
Objective-C for those
attendees who may have
never seen it and might
be worried that it will
be difficult to code in
(it isn't!).
Google said Tuesday that
it's going mobile with
its Google Gears
technology, the stuff
that's supposed to let
web-based apps run
unconnected to the web,
beginning with Windows
Mobile 5 and 6 devices
ahead of its own nascent
Android platform. Same
day, Microsoft came out
and made a
victory-over-Adobe-Flash
statement saying that
Nokia and its Symbian
OS-based phones and
Internet tablets are
going to embed its
Silverlight plug-in,
Microsoft's
Flash-competitive
crossbrowser/
cross-platform approach
to delivering rich media
and web applications.
IBM says it's found a way
to make mashups secure
enough for business.
Because of inherent
browser insecurity,
mashups aren't really
viable for widespread
business adoption. But
what's a little thing
like viability compared
to the pressure of
keeping up with the
Joneses - in this case
the consumer mashup rage.
So to keep the enterprise
from hurting itself - and
being held hostage by
some cyber crook - IBM
has come up with SMash,
which basically lets
information from
different sources talk to
each other - and create
the one unified view
mashups are famous for -
but keeps them isolated
so it's harder for
malicious code to inject
itself into the company
system.
Acquia has yet to price
its maintenance and
support subscriptions -
there should be a variety
of SLAs - but they're
supposed to include an
electronic update
notification system code
named Spokes for updates
that have been reviewed
for security and
compatibility and are
supported by Acquia.
Acquia is currently at 12
people, expecting to be
25 by the end of the
year. Its Series A money
comes from Northbridge
Venture Partners, Sigma
Partners and O'Reilly
AlphaTech Ventures.
According to Dries' blog,
Drupal 7 should offer the
ability to create, share
and mashup managed
content, letting Drupal
be a data repository
accessed by tools and web
sites across the network.
Microsoft today attempted
to exorcize the
interoperability bogeymen
that have haunted it
since it was first
discovered to be using
secret APIs 20 years ago,
bogeymen that now quote
European antitrust law at
it and carry writs from
the Court of First
Instance in Luxembourg.
To avoid further
confrontation with the
European Commission,
which opened a broad
investigation of
Microsoft's
interoperability last
month, the company said
it would voluntarily open
up all the APIs and
communications protocols
in its biggest revenue
producers now and
forever. To be clear, it
said that these are the
APIs and protocols 'used
by other Microsoft
products.'
The New York Times quoted
anonymous aides as saying
they had urged McCain and
lobbyist Vicki Iseman to
stay away from each other
prior to his failed
presidential campaign in
2000. In its own
follow-up story, The
Washington Post quoted
longtime aide John
Weaver, who split with
McCain last year, as
saying he met with
lobbyist Iseman and urged
her to stay away from
McCain. Donna Rice Hughes
(born January 7, 1958)
was a figure in the 1987
sex scandal that ended
the first 1988
presidential campaign of
Gary Hart. Since the
mid-1990s, she has worked
as an anti-pornography
activist.
More than 30 million
mobile phone users in the
Philippines now have
access to the latest in
mobile communications
with a new video SMS
service offered by Smart
Communications (SMART)
and built on NMS
Communications' proven
Video SMS solution.
SMART, the leading
wireless services
provider in the
Philippines, launched a
'Video Avatar' service in
December 2007 that allows
users to send and receive
video messages featuring
either live video or a
chosen avatar.
So is O'Reilly actually
condoning the hacking of
the phones? O'Reilly has
had a long and
prestigious history as
being the ultimate source
for *nix manuals,
including many books that
became so dogeared I
actually bought multiple
copies, including dozens
of 'in a nutshell' books.
Back in those good old
days, 'hacks' which
appeared in O'Reilly
titles were actually just
low-level down-and-dirty
nuggets of pure gold that
geeks and admins loved
but were all perfectly
legal.
Sun is offering ten
grants of US $11,500 -
equivalent to several
months of pay for
developers in some
countries - for the best
NetBeans projects
submitted by open source
developers. Conceived as
a means of increasing
general awareness around
the NetBeans project as
well as rewarding good
work done by the NetBeans
Community, the 'Dreams of
Reality' contest is
described in detail by
worldwide NetBeans
Community Manager Bruno
Souza, the charismatic
Brazilian developer, in a
special audio webcast
currently playing on
SYS-CON.TV.
This session will focus
on our experience of
developing open
source-based mobile
messaging and sync
applications for both of
these platforms. It will
compare and contrast the
platforms in terms of the
development methods and
tools required, and their
strengths and weaknesses
from a developer's
perspective. The
presentation will share
lessons learned as well
as tips and techniques
for developing for both
platforms.
As interest in mobile
AJAX gathers in the wake
of the Apple iPhone
release, the ICEfaces
open source project is
poised to deliver mobile
AJAX solutions. This
presentation talks about
why the server-centric
nature of the ICEfaces
technology provides
inherent advantages in
the mobile space. You
will get a brief overview
of the ICEfaces
technology and see how it
is applicable to
resource-constrained
mobile devices. There is
also a demonstration of a
mobile ICEfaces
application running on
both the Safari and Opera
mobile browsers. Finally,
you will learn about some
of the emerging best
practices for mobile AJAX
application design, and
get a glimpse of the
ICEfaces roadmap for
mobile AJAX.
Adobe earned $222.2
million, or 38 cents a
share, up 21%, on record
fourth-quarter revenues
of $911.2 million, up 34%
year-over-year, exceeding
the company's revenue
target of $860
million-$890 million. It
attributed the results to
Acrobat, its Creative
Suite 3 products and
momentum in its
enterprise business.
Creative Suite 3, which
started coming out in
April, includes upgrades
to Photoshop, Illustrator
and software acquired
with Macromedia like
Flash, Dreamweaver and
Fireworks. On a non-GAAP
basis Adobe earned 49
cents in Q4, a penny more
than Wall Street
expected.
The Software Freedom Law
Center (SFLC), defender
of the GPL's honor, said
Monday that Xterasys
Corporation, one of the
companies it sued in
November for not
providing users with the
source code to the GPL
2-protected Busybox Unix
utilities as the license
requires, has settled out
of court. That makes two
renegades brought to
justice. Monsoon
Multimedia, the first
company SFLC sued on
behalf of Busybox'
creators, also settled.
And a few days ago SFLC
sued Verizon
Communications, the phone
company, for patent
infringement because it's
not publishing the source
code for the Busybox
widgetry embedded in the
Actiontec router it
distributes connecting
customers to the
Internet, TV and phone.
Verizon has maybe nine
million FiOS customers.
Limelight Networks
announced that
Blockbuster has
exclusively selected
Limelight Networks' rich
media CDN and Microsoft
Silverlight to provide
the technical streaming
capabilities for the
first studio-backed
feature streamed in its
entirety -- JACKASS 2.5
-- to be distributed
directly online by
Paramount Pictures
Digital Entertainment,
MTV New Media group from
MTV Networks and
BLOCKBUSTER.
In keeping with the
longstanding SYS-CON
tradition of being at the
very forefront of
software development with
all its online and
offline resources,
SYS-CON Media & Events
jointly today announced a
double whammy, launching
both 'Open Web
Developer's Journal' (htt
p://openweb.sys-con.com)
and 'Open Web Developer
Summit' (http://openweb.s
ys-con.com) - to be held
for the first time in New
York City April 21-22,
2008.
Comtrend announced it has
become the first
manufacturer to offer
home networking adaptors
that support speeds up to
400 Mbps. Comtrend's new
product, called the
PowerGrid 904, is an
Ethernet Powerline
adaptor that plugs into
any standard power plug
in a home. The PowerGrid
904 provides Comtrend's
carrier customers a
competitive advantage in
deploying next-generation
triple-play services,
particularly IPTV, over
existing wiring within a
consumer's home.
Within minutes of my blog
entry, I received the
strangest email
notification, alerting me
to another blog written
by Alan Zeichick,
'co-founder and editorial
director of BZ Media,
which publishes SD Times
and Software Test &
Performance, and which
also produces the
Software Security Summit,
Software Test &
Performance Conference,
and EclipseWorld. Also
president and principal
analyst of Camden
Associates.' That's what
his bio says.
From Application
Virtualization to Xen, a
round-up of the
virtualization themes &
topics being discussed in
NYC June 23-24, 2008 by
the world-class speaker
faculty at the 3rd
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo being held by
SYS-CON Events in The
Roosevelt Hotel, in
midtown
Conference in San
Francisco. Dvorak held
forth on a number of
topics, including the new
AMD/Intel lawsuit, the
viability of Java and
Sun, the value of (or
lack thereof) of
corporate PR, and whether
or not a new book about
Silicon Valley is really
worth reading.
According to Sean Walsh,
President and CEO of
Skyway Software, 'Our
Skyway Community is
thriving and our members
are very talented. We
truly look forward to
their RIAs submittals and
Skyway Builder extensions
and are excited that all
of the contributions will
benefit the entire Skyway
Weitzner brings 30 years
of publishing experience
to ZDE, starting in
editorial at Hearst
Business Communications
and moving over to the
business side at CMP
Media. As CMP Media COO
and CEO, he transformed
the company from a
print-centric publisher
focused on multiple
markets to a tech
You remember back in the
early days of video games
when there wasn't enough
capacity on the carts
themselves to support 30
hours of gameplay? What
was the solution to keep
you playing? They made
the games unbelievably
freaking difficult. Try
playing Kid Icarus now
after having played a