Curl announced the
release of its Curl Data
Kit (CDK), the second
product to be delivered
from Curl's Open Source
initiative. As the newest
addition to Version 6.0
of the Curl Rich Internet
Application (RIA)
Platform, the CDK library
facilitates building
data-centric applications
in Curl and provides
support for local SQL
databases. By allowing
the storage and retrieval
of data using the popular
SQLite engine, the CDK
library is an important
foundation for
occasionally connected
computing (OCC)
applications developed
with Curl.
Cynergy Systems announced
the opening of its Boston
office. Located at 34
Farnsworth Street in the
popular Seaport area,
Cynergy's newest office
is in the heart of
Boston's growing digital
media community.
E-mail is extremely easy
to adopt and use, and
lends itself very well to
certain types of
collaboration. When two
people are attempting to
collaborate
asynchronously, e-mail is
usually the best
solution. It's certainly
far less frustrating than
phone tag. But once more
people are involved,
email's utility rapidly
degenerates. While the
rise of free, open-source
solutions makes it
tempting to build one's
own collaboration tools,
on-demand or Software as
a Service (SaaS)
solutions are the better
choice for the majority
of users and uses.
Catalyst Resources
released a 'green audit'
of their
software-as-a-service
(SaaS) collaborative
workspace project that
allows distributed
business teams of all
sizes to work virtually
and seamlessly online.
The Rich Internet
Application (RIA) enabled
Catalyst Resources to
reduce its carbon impact
footprint by 21,000 lbs
of CO2 per month, while
simultaneously reducing
expenses and increasing
billable activities by
nearly 20%.
Curl announced that the
University of Hawaii at
Manoa will be leveraging
the Curl Rich Internet
Application (RIA)
platform this year for an
independent study project
entitled 'Anti-Keylogger
for Secure Web
Applications.' Curl was
selected as the
technology for the course
because of its
easy-to-learn programming
language and strong
security features for
developing Web-based
applications.
Curl made available the
newest example of a Curl
Nitro 'fit client'
application. Designed by
Manuel Lima, the founder
of VisualComplexity.com,
the CurlGraph features a
visual representation of
the social graph of
individual Facebook
members. Using the
desktop-based
application, users can
visualize a circle of up
to 128 friends from an
established Facebook
account, enabling them to
see relationships and
navigate quickly through
that friend data to find
the information they
want. Through this demo
application, Curl
showcases its ability to
support a visually
engaging, interactive
desktop application that
is deployed like a Web
application.
Farallon Geographics and
its design partner Stamen
Designs have been
selected by the
California Office of
Statewide Health Planning
and Development (OSHPD)
to develop a Rich
Internet Application
(RIA) for the next
generation of its
'California Health Care
Atlas'. The new Web-based
atlas will integrate
interactive mapping,
reporting, and charting
elements with a dynamic
real-time interface to
tell the healthcare story
in California, allowing a
broad spectrum of users
the ability to
investigate and learn
about the human health
and healthcare landscape
in California.
If Gartner's assessment
of AJAX's position on the
Hype Cycle is correct,
then the days when AJAX
is the only game in town
are over. Enter the age
of what Anne Thomas Manes
of the Burton Group calls
'Fit Clients' - a hybrid
of Thick Clients (a.k.a.
Fat Clients) and Thin
Clients (HTML and RIA).
Adobe AIR is definitely a
Fit Client technology,
but it's not the first
and won't be the only
player in this space.
Curl is executing on the
next phase in its Eclipse
strategy with the
availability of the beta
versions of the new
Eclipse-based Curl Rich
Internet Application
(RIA) development tools.
The first release of the
Curl Development tools
for Eclipse (CDE) and
newest release of the
Curl Runtime Environment
(RTE), Version 6.0.4,
provide enterprise
developers with the tools
to build and deploy their
mission-critical,
enterprise-class RIAs
within the increasingly
popular Eclipse
environment.
Cynergy Systems announced
it has been selected as a
finalist for the 2008
Helios Apollo Awards. In
conjunction with the
Washington, D.C.
metropolitan chapters for
the Society for Human
Resource Management
(SHRM) and SmartCEO
magazine, Helios HR, a
provider of outsourced
human resources and HR
consulting, has chosen to
honor Cynergy as a local
company dedicated to
promoting employee
development.
Curl announced the
general availability of
the Curl Run Time
Environment (RTE) for
Macintosh. The Curl RTE
is the engine of the Curl
Rich Internet Application
(RIA) Platform that
executes Curl
applications and renders
code, content and
graphics on client
machines. As a result of
this release, Macintosh
users can now take
advantage of the same
enterprise-class features
of the Curl RTE that are
already offered to
Windows and Linux users.
When talking about the
'web' what are we
referring to? For most
people it's what can be
experienced through their
web browser including
HTML, audio and video
streaming, Flash-based
animation, or rich
Internet Application
(RIA) interfaces. The key
to this perspective is
the web browser, which is
viewed as essential for
experiencing any type of
content available via a
hyperlink on the web.
The mouse was the
original idea of Doug
Engelbart who was the
head of the Augmentation
Research Center (ARC) at
Stanford Research
Institute. Engelbart's
philosophy is best
embodied, in my opinion,
in the design of another
device that he invented,
the five-finger keyboard
- with keys like a piano,
used by one hand. The
problem was, Engelbart's
five-finger keyboard and
mouse combination was
very difficult to learn.
If you design an
application that runs on
Windows but doesn't look
exactly like Windows, so
the old argument goes,
the effect will be
unsettling for users. But
sticking to the native
look and feel (L&F)
should not be the
end-goal of designers.
Desktop widgets have been
around for a very long
time. The first set of
desktop widgets were
introduced by Apple back
in 1983 with their
release of Apple Desktop
Accessories. Obviously
Apple was way ahead of
the curve, but these
early widgets were not
Internet enabled - the
popular Internet, as we
know it, didn't exist -
so their utility was
pretty limited.
For the past ten years
application developers
have been stuck with only
two desktop client
choices. Traditionally,
they can choose either a
very thin Web-client
technology implemented in
HTML and CSS, or a very
heavyweight thick client
experience implemented
using traditional
client/server (C/S)
technologies (e.g. Java
Swing, MFC). It wasn't
until the introduction of
RIA technologies (e.g.
AJAX, Adobe Flex, Curl,
and Silverlight) and
widget engines (e.g.
Yahoo! Widgets and Google
Gadgets) that we were
given more options.
Mar. 13, 2008 06:30 AM Reads: 15,257 Replies: 1
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR RSS FEEDS & GET YOUR SYS-CON NEWS LIVE!
Click to Add our RSS Feeds to the Service of Your Choice: