Join Chennai ColdFusion User Group for this “can’t miss” meeting

February 20, 2008

Join the Chennai ColdFusion User Group for this “can’t miss” meeting (01-Mar-08)

Join the Chennai ColdFusion User Group for this can’t miss meeting! Event: Adobe’s RIA technologies enable you to rapidly build and deploy the most engaging applications across browsers and on the desktop. The Chennai ColdFusion User Group is hosting a special live event to share exciting new information on Adobe’s platform tools and technologies for building RIAs. You’ll see an exclusive user group video presentation by Adobe Chief Software Architect, Kevin Lynch, hear some important product news, plus get your hands on some exclusive schwag and other giveaways. Be part of the fun and excitement and join the rest of the Adobe developer community by participating in this very special event.


Join Chennai ColdFusion User Group on this day and win

-         Adobe AIR T-Shirt for all participants.

-         Lucky winners will receive O’Reilly Books.

-         One lucky winner will get Flex 3 Professional from Adobe.

-         Pizza and Coke.

 
Meeting Schedule

Date: Saturday, March 1.
Time: 11.00 – 12.30
Venue: No.33 Celestial Center, 3rd Floor, T.Nagar Chennai.
Voice: + 919894443439
Mail: akbarsaitn.cfmx@gmail.com


Participation Benefits:

1. To build ColdFusion Networking in Chennai, India.

2. To share latest Web Technology knowledge among ColdFusion developers.

Confirm your Presence by emailing us at akbarsaitn.cfmx@gmail.com

Regards,
Akbarsiat
Chennai Adobe ColdFusion User Group Team,
www.cfugind.com.


Coding Methodology

February 15, 2008

I would like to thank Clark Valberg for suggesting me to read this Ben Nadel blog about “My Coding Methodology – Understanding The Madness And The Man Behind It”. I am a frequent reader of Ben blog it’s great place to find all your ColdFusion questions get answered I like his way of approaching ColdFusion stuff’s.

It’s really a great article about coding standards in all ways. Especially about the code structure conventions for ColdFusion tags, tag attributes, self closing tags etc., and about the code comment in ColdFusion custom tags and components. It’s a must read article for all ColdFusion developers.


Yahoo! Maps AS3 Component

February 12, 2008

Yahoo! Maps AS3 Component

The all-new Yahoo! Maps component for Flex 3 enables you to add a map to a wide-range of web and desktop applications. Included in the API is support for other Yahoo! APIs including the geocoder, local search and traffic APIs along with an advanced marker and overlay manager to allow you to easily represent data on the map.

Using the YahooMap component in your Flash, Flex, Ajax or AIR projects gives you the ability to develop anything from a simple map mash-up to full application utilizing Yahoo! Maps.

Link : http://developer.yahoo.com/flash/maps/


Open source at Adobe

February 6, 2008

Open source at Adobe an article by Dave McAllister in Adobe Edge newsletter Dave is Director of Standards and Open Source at Adobe.

It’s pretty apparent that much of today’s tech world is powered by open source software. From Apache to Eclipse and Adobe Flex to Zope, you’ll find open source in every aspect of development.

I’m director of standards and open source for Adobe’s Platform and Developer business unit. I’ve been at Adobe for more than a year, but my open source and free software roots go way back. I wrote my first free source program at NASA on nonparametric statistical analysis. In the 1990s, I led efforts for open source at SGI for the GNU compilers, including the delivery of GNU compilers as supported products. I drove Linux adoption for SGI, including the release of core products such as XFS and OpenGL as open source. I’ve been involved in many open source–based companies, either driving creation of them (such as Cassatt Corporation, Egenera, and Sistina) or leading efforts to integrate open source into them (such as with NEC and now Adobe).

Over the last year, Adobe has become more directly involved in open source activities. While we’ve always worked with open source, we’ve taken things up a notch to deliver enterprise software as open source, and we’ve moved some of our premiere technologies, such as PDF, to open standards.

What is open source?

No official definition for open source exists. The term was created in Palo Alto, California, in 1998. In short, it is the ability to use, study, and modify the source code as you wish, without additional licensing costs. But it can also be considered a licensing term, a manifesto for computer users, or even a distribution model for software.

I think of open source as a conversation in source code, including the ability to change the conversation in unforeseen ways. Of course, that implies that proprietary code is a monologue.

Open source rules

Open source rules are simple enough:

  • Allow free redistribution
  • Allow source code access
  • Permit derived works
  • Protect the integrity of the author’s source code

These are clear, common-sense rules. (They are also debatable, but that gets us into licensing hell.) The official version of these rules from the Open Source Initiative (OSI) is a bit longer and is focused more on a certification status. OSI rules concentrate more on the licensing of actual software or code. They don’t express how a company should approach open source.

So what are the common sense rules for using open source from a corporate view? They are even easier.

Rule 1: Give credit where credit is due

If you use someone else’s program, work, or code fragments, give him or her credit. This actually should go beyond open source; it’s a good rule for life. For example, when I was at Cassatt Corporation, we built a complex automation control system that makes use of other programs, and thus we created a thanks page. (Don’t ask why it’s in the legal section.) If you notice, it’s lengthy and yet clearly recognizes that using open source for development and delivery reduces the development complexity of Cassatt’s data center automation tools.

Rule 2: Return value equivalent to what you receive

Note that this doesn’t say, “Open source your products.” This means that if you get something from open source, give something back. You can give back by recognizing the work of others, releasing code from other projects, hosting projects for others, or opening other significant code.

Who uses open source?

If you are a developer, odds are you use open source. From a survey of decision makers, open source is used by 71% of developers in the world, and 54% of all organizations use some open source in production systems. In fact, half of all companies claim that open source is increasing in use.

Do you use open source? Do you use Linux, OpenOffice, or Samba? How about Apache, Google, Amazon, PayPal, Yahoo, or Firefox? How about Flex, XMP, or Spry?

How Adobe supports open source

Adobe supports open source activities in multiple ways. We work directly with contributions to existing projects, such as WebKit and Eclipse. We work indirectly by supporting Adobe products on open source operating distributions, such as supporting Adobe Reader and Adobe Flash software on Linux distributions. We do pure research on development and make those implementations open source, such as the work with the Adobe Source Libraries. And we are releasing substantial code and products as open source.

These models reflect two types of involvement: hybrid and direct.

Hybrids are products or projects that make use of open source technology as a build element or a stack element. In short, a hybrid uses open source projects to provide benefits to a different product. A hybrid doesn’t just mean getting code; it means adding value in other ways, such as:

  • Collaborative models, which enable us to work with others on ambitious projects
  • Lower-cost development models, which provide the opportunity for more creative input
  • Faster and open development cycles, with substantial improvements in code quality

At the 2007 Open Source Think Tank, the discussion groups felt that all companies are hybrid to some extent. Adobe is a hybrid company. A short list of components we use or work with include WebKit, Eclipse, GNU compilers, and Linux.

Direct contribution is always the place that gets the most press. (As I stated many years ago, Linux itself will only be important when nobody cares that it’s Linux. This is now true). For companies to begin to open code and open source products, they must also understand the drive behind open source. Not everyone immediately understands open source, and the process of education takes time. Fortunately, Adobe is always receptive to new ideas and new directions.

As it makes sense, Adobe will consider opening certain technologies and products to open source. But keep in mind, not all products make sense to open. We need to consider the impact it has on topics such as intellectual property rights (for example, patents, copyrights, and trademarks), revenue, cost, and process. We also need to decide whether such a move will enable our competition to take over a market by corrupting a project.

Over the last year, Adobe has released a lot of software as open source. Most commonly mentioned is the Flex SDK, our programming language for rich Internet applications. Following and accompanying Flex are several related projects: the Flex-Ajax bridge, the Flex-Ajax video bridge, and BlazeDS, a remoting and HTTP-messaging library for applications. Adobe has also released extensible metadata platform (XMP) as open source. In fact, the open source roots of the company can be tracked back several years with the Adobe Source Libraries and the Spry frameworks. Just recently, we followed up our November 2006 release of Tamarin (a virtual machine for ECMAScript) with a code contribution optimized for size and performance. This drop — part of the code repository for the Tamarin project — will enable the Tamarin virtual machine to run in mobile environments.

Today, numerous companies use quality code they received from an open source effort. Adobe will continue to invest in the open source communities and release new and exciting products as open source. After all, open source clearly leads to innovation and development of creative applications — and, at Adobe, we believe we have technologies and tools that can accelerate that innovation.

 Orginal Source:http://www.adobe.com/newsletters/edge/february2008/articles/article7/index.html?trackingid=BSFZT

 


Eloquent JavaScript

February 4, 2008

Eloquent JavaScript is a digital book providing a comprehensive introduction (tutorial) to the JavaScript programming language. Apart from a bookful of text, it contains plenty of example programs, and an environment to try them out and play with them.

 The book is freely available, and may be used (as a whole or in parts) in any way you see fit, as long as I am credited as the original author.

Source :http://eloquentjavascript.net/ 


The Spry Framework for Ajax from Adobe Labs

February 4, 2008

spry.png

The Spry framework for Ajax from Adobe Labs is a JavaScript library that provides easy-to-use yet powerful Ajax functionality that allows designers to build pages that provide a richer experience for their users. It is designed to take the complexity out of Ajax and allow designers to easily create Web 2.0 pages.

The Spry framework is a way to incorporate XML, JSON or HTML data into pages using HTML, CSS, and a minimal amount of JavaScript. The Spry framework is HTML-centric, and easy to implement for users with basic knowledge of HTML, CSS and JavaScript. The framework was designed such that the markup is simple and the JavaScript is minimal. By building the front-end of your web application with Spry you enable a more efficient designer-developer workflow by keeping UI separated from back-end application logic. You can view the demos and samples created by Spray.

 Demo: http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/spry/demos/