Please Add RIA to Domino Development
Category
Stephan Wissel has asked for comments on his forthcoming commentary on what it takes to be a Domino Developer. Because Stephan is a development wizard, I will be reading his every word.
But, I'm also going to make a plea, in hopes that with the new 8.5 Eclipse Domino Designer we can extend the relevance of the Lotus platform.
The corporate IT world is facing the integration of external, hosted social systems. I don't think enterprise computing will vanish (ala Nicholas Carr) because of these trends, anymore than outsourcing wiped clean entire departments. I can agree, though, that the deck is going to be shuffled and it's going to be important to hold some open-source cards in your hand.
SDTimes reports on a study by Evans Data, which identifies that "second generation" corporate programmers are doing more than .NET and J2EE.
I have my fingers crossed that it'll be possible in 8.5 to build out some very unique solutions: Rich Internet Applications.
Stephan Wissel has asked for comments on his forthcoming commentary on what it takes to be a Domino Developer. Because Stephan is a development wizard, I will be reading his every word.
But, I'm also going to make a plea, in hopes that with the new 8.5 Eclipse Domino Designer we can extend the relevance of the Lotus platform.
The corporate IT world is facing the integration of external, hosted social systems. I don't think enterprise computing will vanish (ala Nicholas Carr) because of these trends, anymore than outsourcing wiped clean entire departments. I can agree, though, that the deck is going to be shuffled and it's going to be important to hold some open-source cards in your hand.
SDTimes reports on a study by Evans Data, which identifies that "second generation" corporate programmers are doing more than .NET and J2EE.
Close to 40% of developers creating collaborative programs are writing such Web 2.0 applications for a corporate enterprise, said John Andrews, president and chief executive of Evans Data, at a developer relations conference hosted by the research firm Monday.
These developers are also widely embracing open-source platforms, Andrews noted, as 70% of developers surveyed use scripting languages such as Perl, PHP, Python or Ruby.
I have my fingers crossed that it'll be possible in 8.5 to build out some very unique solutions: Rich Internet Applications.
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Comments
P.S.: This is in no way an official IBM statement.
Posted by Stephan H. Wissel At 07:18:43 PM On 05/05/2008 | - Website - |
Posted by Jack Dausman At 05:52:53 AM On 05/04/2008 | - Website - |
Posted by Ed Maloney At 12:55:19 AM On 05/04/2008 | - Website - |