After a $1.5 million
angel round, Desktone,
which was started in 2006
by Eric Pulier, who also
started SOA Software, US
Interactive and IVT,
picked up $17 million in
first-round funding about
a year ago from Highland
Capital Partners,
SoftBank Capital, Citrix
Systems and the
China-based Tangee
International. SoftBank
as well as Deutsche
Telekom could become
service providers. Ruda
says the brains behind
the technology is Paul
Gaffney, the former CIO
of Staples. The company
has maybe 40 people, more
than half of them in
Shanghai doing
development, which
explains Tangee's
involvement.
Now, what Google
announced is really
exciting! I'm not
kidding. It's even better
than I hoped. Yes, it's
only Python, but IBM's
PC-DOS was only BASIC and
Pascal when it first came
out, and it didn't
matter. Yeah, I preferred
C, but I coded in Pascal
because that's what you
had to do to get an app
running. What you're
going to see here that
you've never seen before
is shrinkwrap net apps
that scale that can be
deployed by civillians.
That's a mouthful, but
that's what's coming.
Why? Because here is a
standardized platform
that can be stamped out
in the billions of units.
Maybe Google can't do it,
but the perception is
that they can. Who is
willing to stand up and
say Google hasn't nailed
scaling? What PCs did in
the 80s, Google is doing
now. PCs took the black
magic out of owning a
computer.
'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.
I am always being told
off by i-technologists
for quoting Picasso as
having said that
computers are useless.
But I still love his
reasoning: 'Because they
can only give you
answers.' Picasso, like
AJAXWorld Magazine, liked
questions. So we thought
we would share with you
what some of the world's
leading rich Internet
application pioneers are
thinking may be the next
questions that we need to
see answered. From that,
readers can themselves
infer: where is AJAX
headed next?
Within the past few
years, Web 2.0 has become
a major technology trend,
dramatically impacting
the way consumers
interact with information
and applications. This
consumer trend is now
extending into the
enterprise; however,
businesses have been more
reluctant than consumers
to adopt these new
technologies.
As a web 2.0 guy who
blogs on 'Direct from Web
2.0', I did not see this
coming. In fact, my
preferences were Mitt
Romney from the
republican side (maybe
McCain too) and Hilary
Clinton from the democrat
side. I think the three
of them (Mitt Romney,
John McCain and Hilary
Clinton) will do better
in the oval office than
other candidates. Just
like how venture
capitalists pick CEOs for
their portfolio
companies, I put
'experience' and -track
record of execution' very
high in my assessment. If
you are conducting a CEO
search for your company,
would you pick someone
who just graduated from
Harvard executive MBA, or
someone who has been
there, done that and has
been doing that for the
entire life?
The evolution of Web
sites to dynamic rich
interactive applications
is a true revolution for
users. But for ASP.NET
developers tasked with
building high-performing
scalable applications, it
presents major
challenges. The features
that characterize blogs,
wikis, personalized
pages, and other
data-driven Web 2.0
applications
fundamentally change
processing, transmission,
and rendering workloads,
and require new
approaches and solutions.
In Web 2.0 applications:
The Alliance's mission is
to accelerate customer
success with AJAX by
promoting a customer¹s
ability to mix and match
solutions from AJAX
technology providers and
by helping to drive the
future of the AJAX
ecosystem.
'The Java backlash,'
writes Bruce Eckel, 'has
been building up steam,
and we're starting to see
some fundamental shifts
because of it.' Java has
been around for 10 years
yet applets are not the
primary way that we
interact with the web.
Applets are not
ubiquitous, and everyone
got excited about AJAX
instead.
Nowhere in the preamble
to the Declaration of
Independence did Thomas
Jefferson reference the
Internet, eBay, Skype, or
Flickr. But if he'd lived
another 180 years, to
2006 instead of 1826, I
feel certain he would at
some point have said
something like this...
The significance of
blogging is not the word
'blog' whether used as a
verb or a noun, but its
role as a harbinger of
the game-changing
Web-as-platform
revolution. In
particular, the migration
of blogging from the
individual toward the
enterprise...
The World Wide Web, as we
know it, is exploding.
From its fragments
emerges a new 'container
based' Web based on
Widgets. For the lack of
a better term, I shall
call it a Widget Widget
Web. I have long
advocated the power of
Widgets to transform the
Web as we know it. Hence,
I am starting a new set
of blogs on the future
potential and evolution
of Widgets.
Adobe today announced
that it intends to
release the full Portable
Document Format (PDF) 1.7
specification to AIIM,
the Enterprise Content
Management Association,
for the purpose of
publication by the
International
Organization for
Standardization (ISO).
Early in 2006 there was a
strong sense among
industry insiders that
AJAX-like approaches were
a shoo-in as the new
paradigm for fulfilling
the software development
community's dream of
freedom from OS or
runtime environment
dependent technologies.
Was the early optimism
borne out by subsequent
events? I'll say!
2006 - the year in which
YouTube became culturally
ubiquitous, Flash video
became the de facto video
standard of the Web,
Microsoft beta-launched
Vista, and the Wii
entered our lives - was
also memorable for one or
two other, real-world
events such as the
hanging of Saddam
Hussein, prompting the
obvious question: is the
progress of i-Technology
front-runners like Google
and eBay more, or less,
important than the trial
and execution of Saddam?
On Monday it emerged that
Microsoft had applied for
two patents covering
subscribing and
discovering what it
refers to as 'Web feeds'
- sparking a furore in
the blogosphere and
elsewhere that Redmond
had imperial designs on
RSS users.
One of Gartner's top 10
predictions for 2007 is
that the number of
bloggers will level off
in the first half of next
year at roughly 100
million worldwide.
Gartner estimates that
there are more than 200M
former bloggers who have
ceased posting.
'Social change has
accelerated beyond the
original Wikipedia
concept of six years
ago,' said Wikipedia
founder Jimmy Wales today
as OpenServing, in what
he called 'the next phase
of this experiment,' was
made free. 'We don't have
all the business model
answers, but we are
confident - as we always
have been - that the
wisdom of our community
will prevail,' said
Wales.
GWT in a nutshell: 'Write
your AJAX code in Java,
leveraging concepts and
patterns that have become
very familiar to UI
developers; develop using
proven development
environments that include
good code completion and
refactoring tools like
Eclipse; debug your apps
by running them in a real
browser, using a solid
debugger; then use a
compiler to translate all
that Java code to tiny,
high-performance
JavaScript that
automatically works
around most browser
quirks without so much as
a nod from the
developer.'
As I write this, the
stock price of Google,
Inc. just exceeded $500
for the first time in the
company's still-brief
(two-year) history as a
public company. That
gives Google a market cap
of $150 billion, compared
to $19.5 billion for Sun.
What's the explanation?
Based on the fact that
the first working draft
of the design principles
for XML were published on
14 November 1996, XML
guru Uche Ogbuji declared
this week XML's 10th
Birthday. Although the
actual W3C Recommendation
Extensible Markup
Language (XML) 1.0 wasn't
published till 10
February 1998, work on
XML definitely started -
Ogbuji recounts - around
1996, rooted in almost
thirty years of SGML.
'People are simply amazed
when they understand the
full scope of this
product, its more than
100 components and its
suite of visual tooling,'
said Kevin Hakman,
director of product
marketing, TIBCO, as his
company yesterday
announced the
availability of version
3.2 of its acclaimed AJAX
RIA toolkit.
Adobe Systems, owners of
the Flash Player
currently installed on
over 700 million Internet
connected desktops and
mobile devices worldwide,
will contribute the
player's source code to
the Mozilla Foundation.
Mozilla will in turn use
the code to host a new
open source project
called Tamarin.
'It's not often that I
wish I was in America,'
writes one (UK-based)
developer, 'but this week
sees the MAX 2006 show in
Las Vegas.' He is not
alone: around the Web
world, bloggers both
outside the US and inside
have been discussing the
many announcements made
at this year's MAX and
their implications for
working developers and
designers everywhere.
WebDDJ brings you a
representative round-up.
Emergence is a strong,
albeit sometimes
unpredictable force. The
past two weeks have been
full of some interesting
conversations/observation
s. Google bought JotSpot.
I was reminded yet again
that Google Calendar is a
great product, Gmail is a
strange one and Docs and
Spreadsheet are neither
here nor there.
If the idea of a crafting
or collectors club makes
you think of dusty
community centers and
corny newsletters, you're
stuck in the wrong
century. Today, even
small clubs can look
professional, run
smoothly, and grow
membership at the click
of a mouse.
From the beginning, the
World Wide Web that Tim
Berners-Lee imagined was
a place where the
architecture of
participation ruled.
Berners-Lee's first
application for accessing
the information Web was
both a browser and an
editor, and throughout
the early 1990s he worked
diligently to encourage
Web browser development
groups to develop editors
and servers as well as
browsers. As early as the
spring of 1992, the
challenge was clear:
'Although browsers were
starting to spread, no
one working on them tried
to include writing and
editing functions?.As
soon as developers got
their client working as a
browser and released it
to the world, very few
bothered to continue to
develop it as an editor'
(Weaving the World Wide
Web by Tim Berners-Lee).
Boeing has announced the
shutdown of their
airborne Wi-fi service,
Connexion. It represents
a subtle blow to Web 2.0
and gives us all pause
for thought.
As you would know from my
previous posts, I am a
fan of Widgets and I
believe in the potential
of Widgets (both web and
mobile) to transform the
web experience as we know
it. When I spoke at
AJAXWorld, Adam Sah of
Google gave a fascinating
presentation about
Widgets (which Google
calls gadgets).
Might a phenomenon as
young as the Internet
have already moved into
its second era? Is Web
2.0 more of a rebellion,
a corrective to Web 1.0 -
or is it a genuine
revolution?
I recently read an
article in the
'mainstream' media that
gave me pause. The author
made an assertion that
the current trend towards
Open Source might just be
a passing fad. I thought
about this and looked
critically at the
software industry,
thinking about whether
there was merit in that
statement. After all, we
have seen plenty of high
flyers peter out in a
software industry riddled
with buzzwords and
acronyms-of-the-day. I
just don't believe that
open source is one of
them.
'With the acquisition of
Actimagine's vector
graphics technology, we
will be able to further
enhance the most popular,
high-volume mobile and
consumer devices as well
as broaden our reach into
emerging markets,' said
Al Ramadan, SVP of
Adobe's Mobile and Device
Solutions Business Unit,
as Adobe today announced
the acquisition of vector
graphics technology
developed by Actimagine.
'There is a misconception
that social networking is
the exclusive domain of
teenagers, but this
analysis confirms that
the appeal of social
networking sites is far
broader,' says a report
this week by the Internet
research firm comScore
Media Metrix. For
example, 40% of MySpace
visitors are 35 years old
or older, the analysis
claims.
At the AJAXWorld
Conference & Expo and
OpenAjax Alliance back to
back meetings in Santa
Clara, CA this week, it
has been hard not to
think about the developer
community and how Web 2.0
is impacting it today.
Some commentators have
taken Microsoft's entry
in to the Web 2.0 world
as a reason for spreading
doom and gloom and
predicting the
annihilation of small,
innovative developers. I
disputed this prediction
and agreed with
entrepreneurs Jason Fried
of 37 Signals and Sridhar
Vembu of Zoho. The whole
hype around Windows Live
got me thinking whether
there is some level of
reality distortion going
on.
How about if we spelt
AJAX differently, asked
Håkon Wium Lie, at
AJAXWorld Conference &
Expo, so that the
fundamental role played
by CSS was incorporated
and immortalized?
'Our new platform goes
beyond current enterprise
Web 2.0 technologies to
help optimize and
streamline the actual
business activities,
increasing the speed and
accuracy of
decision-making by
business professionals,'
said JackBe CEO and
co-founder Luis Derechin,
as JackBe used the
occasion of AJAXWorld
Conference & Expo 2006 to
announce what it is
positioning as 'the
industry's most
comprehensive solution
for delivering enterprise
AJAX applications based
on SOA and Web services':
its Presto REA platform.
The first 'Power Panel'
of AJAXWorld Conference &
Expo 2006 just kicked
off, with 4 industry
experts led by AJAXWorld
Magazine Editor-in-Chief
Dion Hinchcliffe,
discussing 'Web-Oriented
Architecture: SOA + The
Web + REST.'
The thing that delivers
that rich AJAX experience
is the decoupling of the
technical back end from
the user experience. As
Bruce Sterling expressed
it, AJAX is the
equaivalent of 'Roller
skates for the Web.' But
when are roller skates
dangerous? When people
are still learning how to
move on those skates.
The lightweight AJAX
programming model has
taken the PC browser
market by storm. This
panel, moderated by
AJAXWorld 2006 Conference
Chair Jeremy Geelan and
with panelists including
both the Father of DHTML
and the Creator of the
Term 'AJAX,' will look at
the totality of its
impact and at the impact
of Rich Internet
Applications as a whole.