Dell announced its
broadest lineup of
dedicated virtualization
solutions ever. More than
a dozen new servers,
tools, and services
simplify the deployment
and management of
virtualization in
Enterprises of any size.
Red Hat is a trusted
open source provider.
Red Hat offers enterprise
customers a long-term
plan for building
infrastructures on the
quality and innovation of
open source. Combining
open source operating
system platform, Red Hat
Enterprise Linux,
together with
applications, management,
and Services Oriented
Architecture (SOA)
solutions, including the
JBoss Enterprise
Middleware Suite.
Apple has finally bought
PA Semi, the fab-less
low-power PowerPC
start-up that supposedly
swooned when Apple
switched from the PowerPC
Intel. What Apple's going
to do with it now become
fodder for the
speculators. The iPhone
uses an 32-bit
ARM-derived chip that
Intel would love to
displace with its
newfangled Atom
processor.
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.
Curl announced the beta
release of Curl Nitro,
the code name for an
extension of the Curl
Rich Internet Application
(RIA) platform which
offers enhanced desktop
capabilities required by
today's enterprises. The
Nitro extension
simplifies the process of
installing and managing
Curl applications
accessed via a browser as
well as directly from the
desktop. Curl Nitro is
the only platform for
both traditional RIA and
Desktop RIA that provides
enterprise-level
security, high
performance and support
for large data sets.
Motorola, which needs all
the help it can get, has
invested some undisclosed
amount of money in
VirtualLogic, the company
that can put multiple
operating systems
concurrently in embedded
devices like cell phones
and infrastructure
equipment complements of
real-time virtualization.
Cisco, Intel and Texas
Instruments as well as
Atlas Ventures and DFJ
Esprit have also invested
in the start-up.
Silverlight 2.0 is a
freaking phenomenal RIA
development environment
and I would actually, at
this point, put the
development experience in
Silverlight 2.0 above and
beyond Flex. I can do
more faster and have it
look better and run more
efficiently in
Silverlight 2.0 than I
can in Flex. BUT, when
you're looking for case
studies, look for ones
where the person or
organization who adopted
Silverlight did so of
their own volition,
without being approached
by Microsoft. I'm
interested in hardcore,
unbiased opinions from
people who have been in
the trenches doing their
own coding, not watching
Microsoft consultants do
the coding for them.
There are plenty of case
studies like that out
there, you just have to
look past the shiny
bouncing balls that are
the Olympics and the
Oscars and all the other
crap that probably cost
Microsoft a hojillion
dollars in marketing
funds and incentives.
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.
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.
Rumor has it that in the
next few weeks Adobe is
going to 'reorganize' its
Mobile and Device
business unit where its
Jobs-criticized Flash
Lite lives and send the
engineers to go work with
the larger platform
effort and Flash proper,
which Jobs has also
criticized. Presumably,
Adobe is going to do what
it takes to appease Jobs.
It does want to be on the
iPhone and needs Apple's
help.
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.
Zimbra announced the
availability of its
ZimbraME (Java Mobile
Edition) client and
source code for
businesses. Users of any
Java-enabled mobile phone
will have access to the
industry's most complete
collaboration solution.
The ZimbraME client
provides Zimbra
Collaboration Suite (ZCS)
Open Source and Network
Edition users worldwide
with free access to the
Zimbra experience with
e-mail and calendar on
mass-market Java-enabled
mobile phones. This
extends Zimbra's reach of
services to the broadest
range of devices
available in the market
and builds on Yahoo!'s
e-mail and mobile Web
services and as a key
starting point for
consumers.
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.
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.
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.
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!).
As an ESRI Corporate
Hardware Partner, GETAC
will demonstrate the
Fully Rugged handheld
PS535E on Sunday during
the GIS Solutions Expo.
Also on display will be
the just-introduced GETAC
E100 tablet, the
workhorse M230 laptop,
and the convertible V100
- all of which offer the
latest technology and
features in a Fully
Rugged package.
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.
As I recently spoke at
the Java Mobile &
Embedded Developer Days
conference at Sun's Santa
Clara campus, and the
yearly Mobile World
Congress conference was
held in Barcelona in
February, and the
majority of the JSRs that
have been active in the
past few weeks are in the
mobile space, I thought
it would be opportune to
focus on Java ME in this
month's column.
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.
4 of our 6 first quarter
projects have major
components in Java ME.
These are new
applications, from
companies who understand
the porting issues and
the complexities. This
quarter is not
particularly different
from other quarters: we
get far more work
designing applications
than designing web sites.
Java ME is going to keep
on chugging, maybe even
seeing a rebirth, for
quite a while yet.
Key opinion-formers in
the field of
infrastructure and
pioneers of
virtualization
technologies of all types
have already begun
submitting speaking
proposals to
Virtualization Conference
& Expo 2008 East, being
held in New York City,
23-24 June, 2008. Topics
covered will range from
Server Virtualization,
Application
Virtualization, Desktop
Virtualization, Network
Virtualization, I/O
Virtualization and
Storage Virtualization,
to Virtual Machine
Automation, Physical to
Virtual (P2V) Migration,
Management Applications,
Tools and Utilities, and
Virtualization Scripts
and Procedures.
HP is about to put out a
novel 1GHz Celeron laptop
it calls a mobile thin
client, its first,
apparently the result of
its acquisition of
Neoware. Wyse, the other
remaining thin client
maven, beat HP, now the
market leader, to the
punch a few months ago
and added two more models
the other day looking
much like HP's. HP's
thing, which starts at
$725, has no drive or fan
or any moving parts at
all; it's thoroughly
solid-state including the
1GB flash module.
Nokia is buying
Trolltech, the publicly
traded Norwegian open
source ISV, for roughly
$153 million cash. Gee,
and Trolltech just joined
the LiMo Foundation, the
anti-Nokia/anti-Microsoft
mobile consortium that's
building a
middleware-focused Linux
handset platform that can
be shared by its members
with third-party access
to the APIs, and not
Google's flashier
Linux-based Android
effort. The acquisition
is practically in the
bag.
Google, which does not
give guidance, missed
both Wall Street's top
and bottom expectations
for its December quarter
by a hair and the punters
turned vicious pounding
it down around 50 bucks
after-hours. Consensus
demanded non-GAAP
earnings of $4.44 on
revenues of $3.45
billion. Google came in
with $4.43 on revenues
$3.39 billion. Those
revenues figures are net
of what's called TAC,
Google's traffic
acquisition costs, the
money it pays its
partners, which it this
case amounted $1.44
billion or 30% of its ad
revenues.
Tira Wireless unveiled
new development and
porting services that
extend its mobile
platform support beyond
Java ME, BREW and
smartphone platforms to
include the Android
platform built by the
Open Handset Alliance.
OK OK, so I admit I'm
already running version
1.1.3 of the iPhone
firmware. While I think
it's fantastic that I now
get the ability to add
web icons to the home
screen, and that the home
screen has multiple
pages, I usually spend my
first few minutes on a
new version of the
firmware looking for
changes in Safari that
might impact iPhone web
application developers.
One that I noticed right
away is that Safari is no
longer fooled by the
1-pixel scroll trick. In
case you're not familiar
with this trick, the way
it worked is that under
previous versions of the
iPhone software, if you
scrolled the web page
slightly, then the
address bar would hide
itself. iPhone web
application developers
took advantage of this to
make their applications
look a little more
'native' by using
JavaScript to simulate a
user scroll of just one
pixel.
I plugged in the iPhone
and now I've got several
episodes worth of 'The
Universe' that I can
watch in the palm of my
hand while I'm on the
train. I'm sure everybody
reading this has already
realized how cool this
ability is, but I'm new
to the whole video
conversion thing. So with
the addition of a fairly
cheap piece of software
(Popcorn) to the hardware
I already own, I was able
to add a lot more value
to my TiVo recordings.
From TiVo to iPhone took
me about 40 minutes for
an episode, but that's
because the TiVo is
wireless and the Macbook
Pro is admittedly not the
fastest at video
encoding. Either way, if
you have a TiVo and an
iPhone, you need to go
buy a copy of Popcorn.
You have perhaps heard -
given the amount of ink
spilled on the story -
that Intel quit the One
Laptop Per Child board
last week rather than get
thrown off for
badmouthing and competing
against the altruistic
non-profit and its cute
little kid-friendly,
customer-shy, AMD
Geode-based
green-and-white widget,
the thing that was
supposed to cost $100 and
currently costs $188.
Intel only took the board
seat and promised
millions of dollars in
financial aid last July
after the head of OLPC,
Nicholas Negroponte,
complained about Intel's
interference with his
brainchild and its
potential third-world
buyers on television's
'60 Minutes.'
Since the iPhone was
first released, early
adopters haven't stopped
talking about what they
think of the device.
While the free promotion
can be a great marketing
tool for wireless
carriers, it can be
crippling if users have
issues with session and
network quality. This is
the background to the
iPhone Developer Summit
session 'Early Adopters:
The Key to Free Publicity
or the Fall of a
Technology,' to be given
in March by Mark
McIlvane, President & COO
of Velocent Systems.
Roughly two years ago,
when I was writing an
article on 'New Features
for Device Developers in
Visual Studio 2005' that
was published in the
August 2005 issues of
this magazine, our
program management team
was already busy shaping
the next release of the
product, which is soon to
be released as Visual
Studio 2008. We spent a
lot of time talking to
our major customers and
reviewing the feedback we
got on blogs and
questions on forums on
newsgroups to identify
what
enhancements/features
would be most useful to
our device developers.
One thing that surfaced
was that device
developers needed more
help when it came to
testing their
applications efficiently.
Whether that meant
testing on multiple
devices or under varying
conditions or simply
being able to write unit
tests, they clearly
needed help getting
applications to market
faster by reducing the
testing time.
Perforce Software
announced that Ixonos
Plc, headquartered in
Helsinki, Finland, has
chosen Perforce, the Fast
Software Configuration
Management (SCM) System,
to manage software
development projects for
its leading smartphone
customers. Ixonos'
telecommunications
business unit specializes
in the development,
verification, maintenance
and project management of
software applications and
information systems for
licensees of the Symbian
OS and smartphone
manufacturers.
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.
CNBC reported on Monday
at 'Closing Bell' that
Motorola maybe a logical
take over target by Dell,
HP, or Rim, at $21-22 per
share target price.
Motorola CEO Ed Zander's
chair wasn't even cold
yet when the company's
CTO Padmasree Warrior,
with the company for 23
years, suddenly decided
to 'pursue other
opportunities' and was
out the door. Twenty-four
hours later she turned up
at Cisco as CTO,
reporting to CEO John
Chambers, who called her
a 'visionary.' Obviously
the move has been in the
works for a while. The
Wall Street Journal says
she's into 'seamless
mobility,' where multiple
devices share the same
video, voice and data. It
jibes with Cisco's
vision.
According to SMobile
Systems, the launch of
Google Phone platform
will be among the most
positive transformational
moments in mobile
communications history by
further merging computers
with mobile devices. But
while millions of people
will now be able to
'compute on the run,'
those same consumers will
be a high-value target
for hackers, spammers and
others intent on hacking
the new phones.
For building
applications, BundleWorks
includes ant tasks and
command line tools to
allow developers to build
standard bundles for both
custom and third-party
applications. For
testing, BundleWorks
allows a developer to
create and manage
multiple environments to
test multiple versions of
applications. For
deployment, BundleWorks
supports local and remote
deployment and provides a
library of functions to
handle common deployment
tasks. For maintentance,
BundleWorks tracks all
bundle actions and
configuration changes
providing a complete
history of activity.