|
|
Yahoo! Go Examined By Scott Silk  With the arrival of
Yahoo! and its Yahoo! Go
Mobile 2.0 product,
another A-list brand has
entered the market.
Yahoo!'s presence, like
Apple's, expands the
number of ODP (On-Device
Portal) choices available
to consumers, offering
data services that are
embedded directly onto
the devices that people
carry with them every
day, similar to the
desktop applications that
people have downloaded on
their PCs. Oct. 7, 2007 07:45 AM Reads: 7,607 | BrowserHawk 9 by cyScape By Nic Tunney  I have been developing
Web applications for
years, and have been
using random JavaScript
snippets gleaned from the
Web to test a user's
browser and configured
properties. Since this
script would be run
client side, it required
the user to have
JavaScript enabled and
didn't always work in all
browsers. Jan. 28, 2006 01:15 PM Reads: 12,098 Replies: 2 | CFDJ Product Review "CFMX
Exam Buster 7" By Simon Horwith  Macromedia has been
offering ColdFusion
Developer Certification
since version 4.5 was
released. Though it's
arguable that there is no
such thing as an exam
that accurately measures
a person's ability to
develop applications,
some employers do value
such things and there's
no denying that it
certainly doesn't hurt to
have the certification
listed on one's resume.
To help developers
practice and prepare for
the certification exam,
CentraSoft offers their
CFMX Exam Buster
software, recently
updated for the
ColdFusion MX 7
Certification exam. Oct. 16, 2005 11:15 AM Reads: 20,131 Replies: 3 | CFEclipse: The
Developer's IDE, Eclipse
For ColdFusion By Simeon Bateman; Stephen (Spike) Milligan  Many paths lead
developers to ColdFusion.
In the past ColdFusion
was often viewed as an
entry-level language
enabling designers and
other nonprogrammers to
build dynamic sites.
Since the release of CFMX
it has become more
recognized among
developers familiar with
languages such as Java
and PHP. Aug. 18, 2005 06:30 AM Reads: 61,445 Replies: 3 | Introducing...ColdFusion
MX 7 By Ben Forta  After an entire year
spent meeting with and
speaking to thousands of
ColdFusion developers,
the CF team at Macromedia
are unleashing this month
the feature-rich new
release, CFMX 7. Mar. 15, 2005 12:00 AM Reads: 14,651 | Macromedia Flex Builder
1.5 By Matthew Woodward  Over the past couple of
months I've been
introducing you to some
of the fantastic
possibilities Macromedia
Flex offers for building
Rich Internet
Applications (RIAs) with
ColdFusion ('Flex Your
ColdFusion Muscles,' CFDJ
Vol. 6, issue 12 and
'Data Presentation with
Macromedia Flex,' CFDJ
Vol. 7, issue 1), and I
hope you've been
motivated to begin
experimenting with Flex
yourself. Feb. 11, 2005 12:00 AM Reads: 17,967 | Bearing Fruit with Plum By Jeff Fleitz Plum stands for Practical
Lightweight Universal
Methodology, and consists
of a comprehensive
development environment
that includes a
Windows-based IDE; code
generator; robust
application framework;
development methodology;
simple integrated Content
Management System (CMS);
and stored procedure,
unit test, and component
generators. Plum
accomplishes so much for
a ColdFusion developer
that it can literally be
overwhelming trying to
grok it all at first
glance. Feb. 11, 2005 12:00 AM Reads: 13,769 | CommonSpot 4.0 from
PaperThin, Inc. By Steve Drucker CommonSpot Content
Server, developed by
PaperThin, Inc., has been
simplifying Web site
development and authoring
since its introduction in
1998. On April 8, 2004,
the newest generation,
version 4.0, was
released. Web Content
Management products
usually seek to empower
nontechnical users by
allowing them to modify
Web content from their
desktops; Jun. 22, 2004 12:00 AM Reads: 14,522 | Code Co-op Version
Control Software from
Reliable Software By Selene Bainum Question: Who needs
version control? Answer:
Every developer. Most
people think of
versioning control
software as something
that should be left to
big companies and large
teams. However, version
control is a good idea
for everyone. May. 11, 2004 12:00 AM Reads: 15,148 Replies: 1 | CFX-Advanced VPS Hosting
from CFXHosting By Selene Bainum There comes a time in the
life of almost every
developer when he or she
needs to host a Web site.
Unfortunately, not all of
us can have a T1 running
to our basement with a
dual-processor Pentium 4
running our site. No, we
developers - and
businesses - must look
elsewhere for help.
Unless you have a lot of
money, that typically
means you'll be part of a
shared hosting
environment. Mar. 9, 2004 12:00 AM Reads: 19,383 | MAX 2003 Show Report By Robert Diamond In last month's issue of
CFDJ, Simon Horwith
reported on MAX 2003 and
all it had to offer.
Here, we follow CFDJ
editor-in-chief Rob
Diamond as he checked out
the floor of MAX 2003. Jan. 13, 2004 04:28 PM Reads: 12,793 | The Benefits of
Well-Written Software By Hal Helms Mae West, the indomitable
actress/comedienne of the
1930s and '40s, left us
with some unforgettable
quotes. She gave us such
lines as, 'When caught
between two evils, I
generally pick the one
I've never tried before,'
and 'Too much of a good
thing...can be
wonderful.' She also
offered the ironic
observation that 'Virtue
is its own reward.' Jan. 13, 2004 12:00 AM Reads: 11,785 Replies: 1 | FLiPping the Software
Development Process By Hal Helms In the past, I've written
in broad terms about
FLiP, the Fusebox
Lifecycle Process, a
methodology for
delivering successful
software projects that
work (despite its name)
with any - or no -
software framework. In
this article, I want to
'drill down' on one
aspect of FLiP and see
how it is used in
practice. Dec. 9, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 12,896 | Unnatural Acts By Hal Helms Ah, television! Where
else can you see so much
action? Murders are
routinely committed and
solved, dastardly plots
are hatched and foiled,
and characters learn some
deep life-truth - all
within a single hour. Nov. 11, 2003 11:09 AM Reads: 13,958 | Working in a Distributed
Development Team By Gavin Brook Think of the problems you
encountered during your
last project, then
imagine the team spread
across different floors
or buildings, or even
continents! The problems
and pitfalls are greatly
magnified to a point
where development is
severely hindered. Nov. 11, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 10,557 | ColdFusion and SQL Server
Permission Integration,
Part 2 By James Blaha This article is a
continuation of the
how-to guide (Part 1 ran
last month) for setting
up a ColdFusion 5 server
and a Microsoft SQL
Server 7.0 to execute a
DTS package through the
ColdFusion server. Oct. 15, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 13,076 | Build a Simple Mach-II
Application By Hal Helms In the August edition of
CFDJ, Ben Edwards and I
presented a first look at
Mach-II, a new,
object-oriented framework
for building software
applications. In this
issue, I offer a tutorial
(with commentary) on
building a simple Mach-II
application. Oct. 15, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 14,737 | WysiDraw 1.0 By Sheldon Sargent Have you ever wanted to
chat simultaneously with
two or more of your
friends, but each of you
uses a different chatting
medium? Have you ever
participated in a
teleconference where you
had the pleasure of
waiting for the
administrator/moderator's
e-mail of presentation
modifications? Perhaps
you were that moderator,
frustrated that the
company's chosen
third-party collaboration
platform had once again
crashed, leaving your
presentation dead in the
water. Sep. 11, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 12,655 | Fusebox 4 By Hal Helms The latest version of
Fusebox - version 4 - has
been taken out of beta
and placed into general
availability. Over the
last seven years,
Fusebox has grown from a
collection of best
practices and snippets
of code into a
full-featured, robust
framework on which
developers can build true
Web applications. Sep. 11, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 12,040 | ColdFusion and SQL Server
Permission Integration By James Blaha In this article, I'll
show you how to set up a
ColdFusion 5 server and
a Microsoft SQL Server
7.0 that will execute a
DTS package through the
ColdFusion server. The
main objective is to
create a DTS package
that will result in file
output that will be
delivered to a network
UNC path or mapped drive
using a set of stored
procedures executed by
ColdFusion. Sep. 11, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 16,918 | Setting Up Your
Development Server with
ColdFusion 5, MX, and
BlueDragon By Charlie Arehart; Jeffry Houser The world of ColdFusion
application servers is
quite interesting at the
moment. Macromedia's
recent update to CFMX 6.1
promises to add a lot of
stability and speed to
the product. BlueDragon,
New Atlanta's alternate
CFML runtime engine
continues to gain
momentum. Yet despite
these two great products,
much of the development
out there is still based
on ColdFusion 5 (or
earlier). Sep. 11, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 26,985 Replies: 3 | How to Find the Right
Hosting Service By Rob Brooks-Bilson ColdFusion developers are
faced with lots of
choices when trying to
find a ColdFusion hosting
service that meets their
needs. It can be tough
locating a host that
offers the right
combination of features,
service, and support at a
price that's right for a
variety of developers.
In the March 2003 issue
(CFDJ, Vol. 5, issue 3),
we conducted our first
interview with a
ColdFusion hosting
provider. This month, we
interview
Edgewebhosting.net CEO
Vlad A. Friedman for the
skinny on his company's
ColdFusion hosting
services. Sep. 11, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,851 | Mach-II By Hal Helms; Ben Edwards With the release of the
MX version, ColdFusion
has moved from its
strict procedural
programming background
toward object-oriented
design and programming.
This move has evoked both
hope and fear in
developers, some
welcoming the decidedly
new concepts of object
orientation (OO) and some
dreading that they will
lose the language they
love. Aug. 12, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 11,663 Replies: 4 | LayerIT Content
Management System from
LayerIT AS By Steve Drucker After evaluating and
deploying a number of
content management
systems over the past
five years, I guess I've
become a bit jaded.
Frankly, they all just
started to look the same.
To be sure, each one has
core strengths and
weaknesses. Each is
usually geared to fit a
certain vertical market
(education, for example),
and many have similar
levels of functionality.
All of them have
significant usability
issues - particularly
when authoring content
that requires HTML
tables. Aug. 12, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,603 | The Best Recipe By Hal Helms About two years ago, I
decided that it would be
'fun' to learn to cook. I
figured I would be a
quick learner; after all,
I liked to eat (passion
for the subject), I had
been a skilled
cabinetmaker (possessed
manual skills), and I
enjoyed watching 'Iron
Chef' on the Food Network
(had an available
learning resource).
Compared to cabinetmaking
and software development,
how hard could it be? Jul. 11, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,683 Replies: 2 | One Product for All:
Dreamweaver MX By John Wilker Dreamweaver has been
around for years. We've
all seen it in some
version or other, but it
has finally come into its
own in the most recent
version, MX. Jul. 11, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 8,361 | System Thinking By Hal Helms In several recent CFDJ
articles, I've described
software architecture as
akin to model building.
In both designing
software models and
building scale models,
it's important that the
model be internally
consistent as well as
sufficiently rich to
encompass the desired
behaviors of the
real-world system. Jun. 16, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,029 | Macromedia's Data File
Access API Architecture
Unleashed By Simon Horwith Like its predecessors,
Macromedia's most recent
installment of the Devnet
Resource Kit (DRK 3) is
stocked with many
excellent utilities for
Flash developers. Unlike
previous releases, DRK 3
aims to make the lives of
ColdFusion developers
easier by including many
applications and
development tools for use
in CFMX applications. One
of these is an
Application Programming
Interface I developed
called the Data File
Access API (DFA API). Jun. 16, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 11,931 | The Power of Antipatterns By Hal Helms It seems that lately, you
can't pick up a book or
magazine without hearing
about design patterns. If
you're new to the idea of
design patterns, they're
simply time-tested
solutions to common
problems. Design patterns
began with the work of
Christopher Alexander, a
PhD in architecture (as
in buildings). May. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,758 | Breathing Life into a
Time-Tested Curriculum By Simon Horwith I recently reviewed
Macromedia's new
'Developing Rich Internet
Applications' (CFDJ, Vol.
5, issue 2) course to
make developers
interested in adding
Flash to their arsenal
aware of this terrific
new offering from
Macromedia Training. May. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 10,684 | Teamstudio Screensurfer By Greg Lang; Stephen Rittler Every developer will at
some point have to
integrate his or her work
with a legacy system
running on a mainframe
platform. These projects
tend to be both painful
and challenging due in no
small part to the limited
information- sharing
capabilities of outdated,
albeit stable, systems.
XML and Web services
didn't exist when some of
these applications were
written. The concept of
browser-based
applications was years
away. Green-screen
applications were the
norm and dinosaurs ruled
the earth (just kidding
about that last part). May. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 8,964 | Web Services Edge 2003
East International Web
Services Conference &
Expo By ColdFusion News Desk When SYS-CON Media's
sister company, SYS-CON
Events, began preparing
last year for this
spring's 'Web Services
Edge' Conference & Expo,
one consideration was
paramount: every effort
in the nine-month
preparation cycle should
be geared toward making
it indisputably the
world's largest
independent Java, .NET,
XML, and Web services
event. May. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,538 | 10 Mistakes Fuseboxers
Make By Hal Helms In the last year, I've
seen a great number of
developers make the
commitment to learn
Fusebox - and for good
reason: the Fusebox
framework and the Fusebox
Lifecycle Process (FLiP)
give developers both a
framework and a
methodology that work
well in creating Web
applications. Even so,
there are still many
pitfalls that can trip up
Fusebox programmers. If
you're learning Fusebox,
here are some tips on
avoiding common mistakes: Apr. 3, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 8,065 | Site Executive 3.0
Content Management System By Jennifer Larkin Site Executive 3.0
promises ease of use,
standardization, rapid
site implementation,
rights- and role-based
security, versioning,
workflow, and easy custom
module implementation. It
largely succeeds in these
areas. Load balancing and
failover are also
supported. This version
does not have true
localization support, but
it's planned for future
versions. Double-byte
characters are supported. Apr. 3, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 7,180 | Blueprint 1.5 from Ivis
Technologies, Inc. By Steve Drucker Over the last nine years,
I must have coded at
least 100 ColdFusion
applications. Many of
these contained similar
features - calendaring,
e-commerce, content
management, and dynamic
survey forms. Several
were 'one-offs' - based
on work done for previous
customers with some
modified behavior and
rebranding. Others were
architected to work in
either a dedicated or
'Application Service
Provider' mode. All of
them required an
administrative interface
with an accompanying
security model that
required a significant
amount of time to
reimplement. Feb. 28, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 7,933 Replies: 1 | ColdFusion Server
Recovery By Vlad Friedman Have you ever built that
'killer' ColdFusion app
only to have server
problems bring your
application to a grinding
halt? Fortunately, armed
with a little knowledge
and a few batch files,
most issues in ColdFusion
4.0-5.0 are easily
resolvable in less than
60 seconds. Feb. 28, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,415 | CFMX Exam Buster from
CentraSoft By Phil Cruz Do you shave your entire
body?' It's kind of an
odd question (and might
get you a funny look or a
slap in the face
depending on who you
ask!), but if you were to
ask a world-class
swimmer, the answer would
almost certainly be
'yes.' If you're serious
about competition, you
need to be willing to
take the necessary steps
to give you an edge. In
these days of stiff job
competition, getting
certified in technical
skill sets may make the
difference between
landing your dream job or
continuing to dream. Feb. 28, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 8,122 Replies: 1 | A Developer's Story Part
2 By Hal Helms In last month's article,
I introduced you to a
company with a project in
jeopardy. When I was
called in to analyze the
situation, I discovered
that the project was a
major revision; the first
version had been very
successful, but now the
company was running into
problems. I promised the
CIO that I would make a
presentation to his key
development team. In
preparation for that
meeting, I found myself
at a local store, Frank's
House of ModelsÂ… Feb. 28, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 7,642 | A Developer's Story, Part
1 By Hal Helms 'Actually, it's no one's
fault.' This was the
conclusion I had come to
after a week of working
on a nightmare project I
had been called in on.
The CIO had asked me for
a briefing on what I had
found so far.
'But how could this be
such a mess?' the CIO
wanted to know. 'Granted,
the project involves a
sizable change of an
existing piece of
software, but that was
written only three years
ago. I've got 1,500
customers waiting to use
this new version. It's
very high profile - and
we can't get it out the
door. Costs are crazy. I
don't even want to think
how far above budget we
are. We've missed so many
ship dates that the
developers won't even
guess when it might
really be ready.' Jan. 31, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 7,197 | PDFs on the Fly By Kevin Schmidt If you've ever generated
any type of custom report
using ColdFusion, odds
are you've fielded this
question at some point in
time. And while the task
may sound rather
difficult, it can be made
relatively simple with a
particular open-source
third-party tool. Jan. 31, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 11,046 Replies: 4 |
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR RSS FEEDS & GET YOUR SYS-CON NEWS LIVE!
Publish Your Article! Please send it to editorial(at)sys-con.com!
Advertise on this site! Contact advertising(at)sys-con.com! 201 802-3021
SUBSCRIBE TO THE WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL NEWSLETTERS
|
SYS-CON FEATURED WHITEPAPERS  | Building an IM Bot Using
ColdFusion I recently brought a
Google Talk bot that I
put online at
cfdocs@gmail.com. Google
Talk users can ad | AJAX World - Cooking CRUD
with Flex and BlazeDS In today's cooking class
you'll add to your
cookbook a delicious
recipe. It's quick and
won't cost | Cornerstones of
Virtualization: I/O
Virtualization Defined Recently I talked about
what I see as the next
'waves of virtualization'
taking the industry, I
talk | Engelbart's Usability
Dilemma: Efficiency vs
Ease-of-Use The mouse was the
original idea of Doug
Engelbart who was the
head of the Augmentation
Research Cent | Web 2.0 Is Fundamentally
About Empowering People 'Unlocking content to be
remixed into new business
value' is the driver of
Web 2.0 in the enterprise | All-New AJAX Security
Bootcamp Next Week at
AJAXWorld in New York Being held for the first
time on March 18, 2008 at
the historic Roosevelt
Hotel in New York City,
AJ | Zend Studio for Eclipse In my many years of
programming, almost 20
years now, I have used
countless integrated
development e | Building SOA with Tuscany
SCA Many articles have
already been written
about service-oriented
architecture (SOA) and
Service Compon | CFImage Part 3 ColdFusion 8 introduces
the CFImage tag and
dozens of image
manipulation functions.
We have already | Every Beginner Must Grow
Up Do you remember January
of 2004? Macromedia had
just released ColdFusion
6.1 a few months earlier.
C | Working with the Apache
Derby Database and
ColdFusion Early releases of
ColdFusion (under
Allaire) focused on the
Windows market and it was
common to incl | CFImage Part 2 ColdFusion 8 has a load
of awesome image
manipulation
functionality. So much
so, in fact, that it wi | Test Driving ColdFusion 8 Of course, since this is
ColdFusion I expected
nothing less than this,
i.e., powerful AJAX
functiona | Using the Adobe Flex
Toolkit for
Salesforce.com In April 2007 Adobe and
Salesforce.com announced
the availability of the
Flex toolkit for Apex,
Sale | An Introduction To Adobe
Flex For ColdFusion
Developers There's been a lot of
talk in the ColdFusion
community lately about
the newly released Flex
2. If yo | Flex and ColdFusion
Hybrid Application with
ServiceFactory Whether it's in factories
or workshops, in mines or
forests, in offices or
homes, or even in our sac | ColdFusion Frameworks:
ColdBox 2.0.3 Released This release is the first
one to include
contributed content from
Rob Gonda, Tom de
Manincor, Brian | ColdFusion Feature
— Coding with XML As a ColdFusion
developer, hopefully by
now you have heard at
least a little about XML
(eXtensible M | Your First Adobe Flex
Application with a
ColdFusion Backend Flex is a complete set of
tools to develop rich
Internet cross-platform
applications based on the
Fl | Getting Started with
Adobe Flex 2 I'm going to postpone the
second part of my RSS
aggregator article to tie
this column into this
Flex |
CFDJ PRODUCT REVIEWS  | Yahoo! Go Examined By Scott Silk  With the arrival of
Yahoo! and its Yahoo! Go
Mobile 2.0 product,
another A-list brand has
entered the market.
Yahoo!'s presence, like
Apple's, expands the
number of |  | BrowserHawk 9 by cyScape By Nic Tunney  I have been developing
Web applications for
years, and have been
using random JavaScript
snippets gleaned from the
Web to test a user's
browser and configured
proper |  | CFDJ Product Review "CFMX
Exam Buster 7" By Simon Horwith  Macromedia has been
offering ColdFusion
Developer Certification
since version 4.5 was
released. Though it's
arguable that there is no
such thing as an exam
that acc |  | CFEclipse: The
Developer's IDE, Eclipse
For ColdFusion By Simeon Bateman; Stephen (Spike) Milligan  Many paths lead
developers to ColdFusion.
In the past ColdFusion
was often viewed as an
entry-level language
enabling designers and
other nonprogrammers to
build dyn |  | Introducing...ColdFusion
MX 7 By Ben Forta  After an entire year
spent meeting with and
speaking to thousands of
ColdFusion developers,
the CF team at Macromedia
are unleashing this month
the feature-rich new |
BREAKING NEWS FROM THE WIRES
|