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Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
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AMF 3 Specification Is Published
Data serialization between Flash Player and the rest of the world made public

Action Message Format (AMF) is a protocol that is used to serialize the data coming into Flash Player or going out to other programming environments that need to communicate with Flash Player. Say, if you create in Java an instance of the class MyOrder.java, this instance can be converted into a string of bytes, sent over the wire to Flash Player and then recreated there as an instance of the ActionScript object MyOrder.as.  The rules of how to do this are defined by a communication protocol, such as  AMF.  Prior to Flash Player 9, the protocol AMF0 has been used, but now Adobe offer implementation of  more efficient AMF3.

The good news is that Adobe decided to make the AMF3 protocol  available to the public, and you can find its description in this document
This is great news for Flash community as it’ll allow more and more third parties to implement this protocol and offer a lot faster communication between the Flash Player and programming environments written in other languages. While Adobe today offers its own implementation of this protocol  for Java and Coldfusion, now it’ll start competing  with other firms that may offer more efficient implementation of this protocol or better tool for developers. The Midnight Coders is one of the vendors that are offering their version of AMF for Java, .Net and other platforms.

While the AMF uses HTTP as a transport, the speed of data exchange between Flash Player and, say,  J2EE application over AMF would be at least ten time faster than comparing to a regular HTTP protocol.
AMF protocol  is based on data polling, but Adobe offers yet another Real Time Messaging Protocol (RTMP) that is being used in such applications as video streaming or others  where the real-time push from the server is needed, for example financial trading applications. The specification of RTMP protocols has not been published yet at this point.

About Yakov Fain
Yakov Fain is a Managing Director of Farata Systems, consulting, training and product company. He has authored several Java books, dozens of technical articles. SYS-CON Books released his latest co-authored book , Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex and Java: Secrets of the Masters in Spring 2007. Sun Microsystems has nominated and awarded Yakov with the title Java Champion. He leads the Princeton Java Users Group. He is an Adobe Certified Flex Instructor. Yakov co-athored the O'Reilly book "Enterprise Application Development with Flex". He twits at twitter.com/yfain.

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Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

I have studied the specification and have a couple of comments.

The compressed way of representing integers with 1 to 4 bytes are very smart, but why did they stop with 4 bytes. If they allowed up to 5 bytes, a complete 32 bit integer could be represented this way.

It isn't clear - at least to me - how negative integers should be represented.

Examples, examples, examples - why aren't their any?


Your Feedback
Spam hater no. 1 wrote: I have studied the specification and have a couple of comments. The compressed way of representing integers with 1 to 4 bytes are very smart, but why did they stop with 4 bytes. If they allowed up to 5 bytes, a complete 32 bit integer could be represented this way. It isn't clear - at least to me - how negative integers should be represented. Examples, examples, examples - why aren't their any?
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