Morning Coffee 75
- 3D Printing is going to be huge. According to the
NYT,
we’ll be looking at around $1,000 for one within four years. For
the impatient, check out Fab@Home and build one right now.
- It’s been a
while since I
experimented with the P2P stack in Windows, but it looks like it’s
getting the managed
treatment
in VS “Orcas”.
- The managed Ruby hits keep on coming. Last week was DLR and
IronRuby. This week it’s a new drop of
Ruby.NET which includes VS
integration.
- Looks like Sun is trying to get back into the Ajax/Flash/Silverlight
fray with JavaFX
Script.
I wrote over a year ago that “In platform portability, Flash has
succeeded where Java
failed.”
I can’t help but believe JavaFX is too little too late. Also, it’s
yet another Java technology name that sounds like it’s been
blatantly copied from MSFT.
JDBC,
JSP,
JDO … What’s next?
JINQ? (via TechMeme)
- Steve Maine has a
great
series
of
posts
on the new Web Programming Model that’s coming in .NET 3.5 and is
currently being previewed as part of the BizTalk Services
SDK. But it was his Balancing reach and
rich post
that I found most illuminating. The first version of WCF feels
hopelessly bound to the WS-* view of the world, which makes it
difficult to incorporate alternative messaging models into the same
programming model. I’ve run into this trying to use SSB with WCF. In
the next version, that WCF / WS-* marriage looks like it’s getting
a little more open. In my current role, I’m not so interested in the
web programming model, but I am very interested in how they are
integrating these alternative models.
Posted by devhawk.net on May 8, 2007. Filed under Development and Morning Coffee. Tagged P2P, Ruby & WCF.
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