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By Ken Rutsky  Look around and be amazed, everything is being re-invented. From the tablet computer to the thermostat, from cars to enterprise software, from incubators to light-bulbs. We are living in an amazing time. Opportunities abound to capitalize on the biggest industrial change since elect... Dec. 22, 2011 01:45 PM EST Reads: 1,720 | By Hollis Tibbetts  If you are not spending more time understanding your customers—and developing tightly scoped requirements to make great software to meet their real needs, not some imagined “needs mash-up” cobbled together by the squeakiest wheels in your organization—you’re part of the problem, and yo... Oct. 5, 2011 12:00 PM EDT Reads: 2,380 | By Jeremy Geelan  "Enterprises everywhere are realizing the inherent benefits of running their core IT services in the cloud,” said Todd McKinnon, most recently VP of Engineering at Salesforce.com from 2003 to 2009, and now CEO of the on-demand identity and access management service, Okta.
"This shift ... Jan. 31, 2011 06:15 AM EST Reads: 9,262 | By Jeremy Geelan  "We are the nation that put cars in driveways and computers in offices; the nation of Edison and the Wright brothers; of Google and Facebook. In America, innovation doesn’t just change our lives. It’s how we make a living." With this one sentence, President Barack Obama ushered in once... Jan. 29, 2011 09:00 AM EST Reads: 8,791 | By Jeremy Geelan  On the day when the Dow Jones Industrial Average topped 12,000 for the first time since June 2008, it was impossible not to correlate the eloquence and optimism of President Obama's "State of the Union" speech on Tuesday night with the restoration of a sense of perspective and hope in ... Jan. 28, 2011 08:45 AM EST Reads: 8,020 | By Joseph Galarneau  [This post originally appeared on Joseph Galarneau's blog and is republished here in Cloud Computing Journal by kind permission of the author.] When you visit Newsweek.com, the words you read started their journey milliseconds earlier from an Amazon.com datacenter somewhere in norther... Dec. 7, 2010 07:45 AM EST Reads: 9,059 | By Jeremy Geelan  Is Web 3.0 maybe going to be less the utopia we've been envisaging and more like the real, physical world, with all the real-world limitations that follow along with it...?|
The latest WikiLeaks ("Cablegate") affair, coming as it does at the very end of the first decade of the 21st ... Dec. 6, 2010 07:45 AM EST Reads: 9,049 | By Peter Silva  Meanings and terms often change or get adjusted over time, especially with Information Technology. While never walking 5 miles to school in two-feet of snow, I did live during an era of TV’s without remotes and vinyl record players. I tend to include many ‘remember when…’ type storie... Apr. 7, 2010 01:15 AM EDT Reads: 4,244 | By Fuat Kircaali  When I saw David Skok's name on recent Ulitzer authors page I was pleasantly surprised. David is one of the key figures in the technology space for the past two decades, including his venture capital activities. Throughout his long career, he successfully launched a number of companies... Mar. 10, 2010 01:15 PM EST Reads: 4,024 | By Christopher Keene  Open source companies live or die by the health of their communities. WaveMaker's proudest achievement last year was creating a passio... Feb. 13, 2010 02:25 PM EST Reads: 4,086 | By Archie Hendryx  With only the ‘you may now kiss the bride’ custom to follow, the ORACLE/SUN marriage (or dare I say SUN/ORACLE) is now finally complete. After months of legal wrangling which has caused nothing but embarrassment and dwindled SUN’s stature within the market sphere, reports also came out... Jan. 26, 2010 12:30 PM EST Reads: 8,839 | By Jim Driscoll  Today we're going to talk about two features of JSF 2.0's f:ajax tag: the event attribute and the listener attribute.
The use of both of these is really, really simple - so I'll just briefly cover the basics, and then launch directly into the sample code.
The "event" attri... Sep. 26, 2009 04:08 PM EDT Reads: 4,148 | By JP Morgenthal  Sure, now that the deed is done and the board has approved the acquisition, there’s lots of Monday morning quarterbacks. However, in this case, I’m not one of them. Indeed, I point to the release of my 9/1997 report that I wrote for NC.Focus entitled “State of Java Report: IBM” and t... Jul. 21, 2009 07:45 AM EDT Reads: 5,232 | By Yehuda Berlinger  The Secrets of Corporate Blogging. I would like to begin with defining what corporate blogging is. There are actually four types of blogs that can be considered corporate blogs; I will list these definitions later. For now, suffice to say that I am most interested in corporate blogging... May. 19, 2009 09:00 AM EDT Reads: 9,936 | By Reuven Cohen  One topic that keeps reoccurring in my various conversations is the sudden interest in cloud centric M&A activities thanks in part to the recent IBM / Sun rumors. Being that I continuously find myself in the midst of a lot of the back room, off the record type conversations I thought I... Apr. 6, 2009 06:00 AM EDT Reads: 10,170 | By Theresa Lanowitz  Sun has been in a holding pattern since the dot com implosion. And, while Sun positioned themselves as "the dot in the dot com", that was the last innovation we have seen come from Sun. Sun, while it once had very competitive hardware, had no idea how to productize and implement effect... Mar. 29, 2009 01:15 PM EDT Reads: 14,566 Replies: 1 | By Yakov Fain  When Wall Street Journal writes, they have their reasons. A couple of days ago they wrote that IBM wants to buy Sun Microsystems for $6.5B.
To me, this is sad news. People will be laid off and some software will cease to exist. Mar. 20, 2009 08:00 AM EDT Reads: 10,602 Replies: 1 | By Yakov Fain I received an email stating that AOL finally abandoned the ugly Java applet that was used in the ICQ2Go, the Web version of the hugely popular (about 30M users) instant messaging system. The person who sent me this email also wrote, 'IMO this was the last popular Java applet. Now the k... Jun. 15, 2008 06:00 AM EDT Reads: 7,995 Replies: 6 | By Yakov Fain Many young programmers don't read books anymore. They google. They argue, 'When I need to find a solution it's just a click away. Why bother purchasing books that are outdated by the time of printing? Real programmers learn by doing - trial and errors'. I do not agree with this. May. 2, 2008 10:15 AM EDT Reads: 9,151 | By George Paolini Ten years ago this month, Java was 1000 days old. Here we bring an article by the then Vice President of Marketing for Sun's Software Products and Platforms, George Paolini. Ten years on, we thought it might make interesting reading, since even back then Sun's community-focused positio... Mar. 10, 2008 10:30 AM EDT Reads: 18,089 | By Jeremy Geelan  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 t... Feb. 23, 2008 02:45 AM EST Reads: 129,322 Replies: 14 | By Yakov Fain JavaOne starts next week, and most of the Java developers will be watching closely what's new and exciting will be announced in the tried, true and aging Java. But my today's column is about books that will be sold at JavaOne. Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex & Java. We spent... May. 9, 2007 10:30 PM EDT Reads: 17,352 | By Jeremy Geelan  Gartner says that the total number of bloggers will peak during the first half of this year at around 100 million, causing John R. Patrick to ask rhetorically whether spring 2007 truly is The Peak of Blogging? Apr. 4, 2007 03:00 PM EDT Reads: 23,925 | By Yakov Fain When I was learning how to work with AJAX, I went through a number of 101-type articles. The biggest problem with these tutorials is that the authors are trying to explain several things at once, which is confusing. I'll try to offer you a very simple example of an Ajax application. Oct. 30, 2006 12:30 AM EST Reads: 31,288 | By Jeremy Geelan  For those who think that one weakness of the Newsweek piece is its title, MSNBC has come to the rescue by repurposing it under the - in my view, far sharper- title 'The New Wisdom of the Web.' This is a much more powerful rallying cry and I, for one, should have much preferred to see i... Jul. 29, 2006 01:30 PM EDT Reads: 30,313 Replies: 3 | By Jeremy Geelan  In one of my (several) former professional lives, I used to publish books about the future, including, for example, the world's first full-length book about groupware. Unless we can first capture and thereafter harvest - asynchronously, as and when it is most needed and most relevant -... Jul. 24, 2006 11:15 AM EDT Reads: 29,824 Replies: 1 | By Jon Kern  I bet you thought agile development was supposed to be easier than a traditional, prescriptive process! That I would wax evangelical that agile development is the answer to everything, and it simplifies your life. Yeah, just like UML and model-driven architecture and XML and SOA and We... Jul. 21, 2006 01:00 PM EDT Reads: 22,637 Replies: 5 | By Jeremy Geelan  Ever since Google realized that 12% of the population would consult Google prior to seeing a doctor, which was followed by a British Medical Journal editorial suggesting that one of the natural next steps for Google would be some kind of medical database for personal use, rumors have b... Jun. 9, 2006 10:15 AM EDT Reads: 26,801 Replies: 3 | By Jeremy Geelan  When Nicholas Carr posed the question 'Does IT Matter?' in his now-famous Harvard Business Review essay, he clearly knew that it would provoke discussion. He probably didn't know, on the other hand, that it would eventually cause the world's richest man - whose wealth is derived 100% f... Apr. 12, 2006 11:45 AM EDT Reads: 31,607 Replies: 4 | By Marc Fleury  Simplicity is the key driving force behind the success of Java. When Dr. Gosling invented the Java language in 1995, the goal was to make life easier for software developers. Java's elegant language design, simple API, and vendor-independence have made it the platform of choice for man... Apr. 2, 2006 01:00 PM EDT Reads: 33,845 Replies: 3 | By Jeremy Geelan  Almost anyone who writes about Internet technologies, or i-Technology in shorthand, runs into a problem area from time to time concerning the issue of what in the i-Technology world was invented by whom? Mar. 8, 2006 02:00 PM EST Reads: 20,638 Replies: 1 | By Jeremy Geelan  Every year for the past 10 years, SYS-CON Media's 'Readers' Choice Awards' have given the multiple constituencies we serve - developers, architects, IT managers, vendors - a chance to exercise their democratic rights, not just through the ballot box but also through the nomination proc... Feb. 11, 2006 02:45 PM EST Reads: 23,024 Replies: 3 | By Jeremy Geelan  This is traditionally the time of year for SYS-CON Media's roundup of i-Technology predictions from around the Web and the year's harvest of thoughts and viewpoints. According to our worldwide network of software development activists, evangelists, and executives, 2006 promises to be a... Jan. 18, 2006 08:15 AM EST Reads: 41,922 | By Jeremy Geelan  'Please don't read [anything] in to my not being at Sun's recent announcement with Oracle,' wrote Sun's president and COO Jonathan Schwartz the weekend after Sun (represented not by Jonathan but by Scott McNealy) and Oracle (represented by Larry Ellison) announced a broad-based reinvig... Jan. 17, 2006 02:45 AM EST Reads: 30,317 Replies: 1 | By Jeremy Geelan  Sometimes people ask me what it takes to run a successful business and I, who know only the media business, am always hesitant to reply. What could someone who has 'merely' spent the past 25 years exclusively in publishing and broadcasting via radio, TV, print and, most recently, onlin... Dec. 15, 2005 03:30 AM EST Reads: 24,971 Replies: 1 | By Jeremy Geelan 'Sun is making the Java Enterprise System, Sun N1 Management software and Sun developer tools available at no cost for both development and deployment,' said the company in an announcement yesterday. The announcement added that Sun is also 'reaffirming its commitment to open source thi... Dec. 1, 2005 09:15 PM EST Reads: 37,103 | By Jeremy Geelan  If successful trade expos are a good barometer of the market place (and they are), then things are going very well indeed with the homegrown category of apps named by Macromedia (soon to become Adobe), namely 'RIAs.' Which started me thinking: to what extent are the winners in the game... Nov. 10, 2005 07:30 PM EST Reads: 25,372 Replies: 2 | By Jeremy Geelan  Sun and Google are going to be teaming up to take on Microsoft in its holiest of holy markets, the desktop. Could such an alliance have been dreamed of just one year ago? The answer, of course, is 'Yes!' 'Game-changing' is what a disruptive company like Google does best, and Sun for it... Oct. 11, 2005 06:15 AM EDT Reads: 67,605 Replies: 1 | By Jeremy Geelan  September is here and since the name comes from the Latin septem, for 'seven' - September having been until 153 BCE not the ninth but the seventh month of the Roman calendar - I have no hesitation in saying that it's an appropriate month to pluck just seven items from the wealth of inf... Sep. 19, 2005 01:00 PM EDT Reads: 21,721 | By Jeremy Geelan  All the myriad commentators who monitor Internet technologies and the i-Technology companies on the NASDAQ doubtless have their own private cluster of indicators that they use to take a weather-check on the overall state of the industry. For some, it's as simple as looking at the NASDA... Aug. 10, 2005 09:00 AM EDT Reads: 38,685 Replies: 2 |
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