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Uncategorized Tony on 21 May 2008

FlexManiacs Presentation

Thanks to everyone that attended my FlexManiacs talk on Flex and Rails. It went well I think, if a little rushed - there was a lot of material to get through.

I'm trying something out to see how it works, and putting all the presentation files and code up on my personal googlecode site.

Thanks again! Next? AIR at RailsConf, baby.

Uncategorized Anthony F on 14 May 2008

Eric Knorr @ InfoWorld : The long good-bye to the browser

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Uncategorized Tony on 14 May 2008

The Clash of the Devices

Look, in 8-10 years I want to be spending less time in front of the computer. "As we know it", I should have added. I hope it doesn't take that long either.

I want a small network of devices that are specialized for certain situations, with form factors to match and knowledge of each other. Maybe that means a lot of my data is in the cloud, maybe it doesn't - I don't care about that.

What I do care about is that a laptop costs a lot and is fragile, and a desktop ties me to my desk. Sometimes I need to sit at a desk, but the rest of the time I'd rather be pacing around thinking, collaborating with friends or co-workers on code or music or writing, or playing games that make me more active, but give me an immersive experience only a computer can provide (think of an FPS that's somehow tied to the geometry of your office or something like that - I don't know yet).

Anyhow, back in the now I want to see the shift starting, and I see it with iPhone and Android. Which should I throw my puny, insignificant weight behind?

The iPhone has a lot going for it. That's an understatement. The device is beautiful, the experience is something only Apple could devise, and the SDK sucks. I mean it. It's going to get a lot of app developers where they want to go - iPhonesville, but the ride won't be a fun one.

I'll never get excited about using Cocoa. It's an ugly, crufty language. Only that sweet, juicy iPhone carrot at the end of that uglystick is enough to even get me to try.

Not only does the language suck, the platform is locked down tight as a drum (admittedly only by the software agreement, AFAIK). Can I daemonize a task from my app? No. Can I wake my app up on a location or time based API event? No. Can I share data between different apps? No. Can I replace any of the default software with software I like better? No.

Android says yes to all of those things. It even says "yes, please can I help you with that would you like anything else, sir?".

And as someone who prefers dynamic, readable languages like Ruby, far be it from me to cry up the merits of Java, but compared to Cocoa it's freaking poetry. Not only that, but Android has A DECLARATIVE LAYOUT LANGUAGE!

That means I can build interfaces in a way that makes sense, not in programmatic code, and not in a silly drag and drop interface builder. I don't want to drag and drop. I want to say what I want in a human readable format. That's what Flex has right. It's a language for describing interfaces. It's the best language for describing interfaces. Android's is subpar. But it's better than interface builder, that's for sure.

Android has one thing against it, and it's big. It's not going to run on the iPhone. It may relegate it to the scrappy underdog ghetto smartphone SDK for a long time. It will probably stay the platform of geeks and hackers and open source advocates and people who wear suspenders and sport long santy clause beards. Unless some visionary device maker frees it and lets it soar. We're all counting on you, device makers.

What kind of apps will people make for these platforms? Well, Apple will force the experience into a very rigid, consistently good, calming, happy, user experience. That's mostly good.

Android will sport a bunch of crazy, ugly, hacky apps, just like Linux does. The user experience will be a mixed bag, because any old geek that comes 'long and cranks out a sweet app won't take the time to make it as clean as the iPhone SDK will force apps to be.

The big deal, and here's what gets me, is there will be way more innovation on the Android platform. Why? The open API, for one. The fact that Third Party Apps are first class citizens. The fact that I can publish and share data between apps - even apps that I didn't mean to publish and share with - by describing my data in a conducive manner. The fact that the software that ships with the Android platform is only a suggestion and I can tout my app as a replacement for it and have the other apps on the phone work with my software as if it were the original.

iPhone software quality will be compressed and consistently good. What you can do with third party apps will feel good, but be limited. With Android the lows will be lower and the highs will be higher. Hackers will discover new ways to do innovative things, and I want in on that.

*Sigh* I'll still be in line in June/July/Whenever for my iPhone 2.0 and try to make cool iPhone apps, though, just like the rest of you. You can't make me like it though. At least not as much as Android.

Uncategorized Anthony F on 10 May 2008

User Interface Resource Center Launches!

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Uncategorized Tony on 10 May 2008

User Interface Resource Center Goes Live

If you're interested in discussion and learning about better User Interfaces, you should check out the User Interface Resource Center, an initiative by EffectiveUI with some help from partners Adobe and Microsoft to build a community around UIs.

There are already some great articles up about the design and development of the eBay Desktop and discussion about designers and developers working together.

Read up, and then get involved!

Uncategorized Anthony F on 10 May 2008

RIA Discussion @ AJAX World

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Uncategorized Tony on 04 Apr 2008

Come see a great panel at the Web 2.0 Expo

Well, tomorrow, the wife and kid and I are off to Italy, and while I'm not looking forward to the day spanning, multi leg, long flight with a 1.5 year old, I know I'll dig it when I get there.

Right after I get back I'm off to the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco. I'm going to be hosting an all star panel that I know you're going to want to see, titled "Failing Fast: Get Your App out of the Lab and Into the Arena". Sitting on the panel is Randy Reiland from the Discovery Channel, Scott Green from Google's SketchUp, Ryan Stewart from Adobe, ZDNet, and The Internet, and last but not least, Alan Lewis from eBay, of eBay Desktop fame.

We've got some great topics to discuss in the general area of how to actually pull off an open process where users are involved in the direction of software you build. What does that mean for brand? How can you sell that process externally and internally? and more. Come see them in action and bring your questions. It's going to be a great panel.

Uncategorized Andy M on 04 Mar 2008

Is Open Resource crashing your Flex Builder on Leopard?

Unzip this and drop the two jars into the plugin folder in your Flex Builder directory:

http://www.andymcintosh.com/eclipse-jars.zip

There’s a known issue with the version of SWT used in Eclipse and Leopard.  Zach Pinter stumbled across the solution on an Eclipse forum  a few months ago after upgrading to Leopard.  It seems to [nearly] completely stabilize Flex Builder.  I was actually crashing Flex Builder when creating new resources, or using the open resource dialog.

Disclaimer:  I have no idea what repercussions this might have on the rest of your dev environment, but it’s been working for me for a few months now on various versions of stand-alone Flex Builder.

I was hoping that the official release of Flex Builder would address this issue, but shortly after installing it, Flex Builder crashed when I created a new Action Script class, so I assume the Open Resource dialog is still busted too.  It’s obviously an Eclipse issue, so unless Adobe released Flex Builder 3 on a yet-to-be-released version of Eclipse, the issue is still around.

Let me know if this works for you!

Uncategorized John W on 28 Feb 2008

Blog moved


I have consolidated all my blogs, both work and personal at  http://johnjwright.com.   Please visit there to visit my blogs related to EUI, Flex and AIR.

Uncategorized John W on 28 Feb 2008

Filtering Code update


For those of you who are looking for the source code for the filtering controls you will find the source code for the examples below as well as HierarchicalBrowser, the itunes like browser.  The actual source code for FilteredCollectionView, CompletionInput is coming soon.   Andy Mcintosh and I are considering starting a project on FlexLib for this where we will release the components as great examples of clean components that use a Flex 4/Open Flux style of developing components.   Stay tuned.

Also, I will be moving my blog to http://johnjwright.com soon, so watch for that.

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