Morning Coffee 86
- Google announces Gears, a browser plugin
for taking your web application offline. Developer docs are also
available.
TechMeme has lots more, but
obviously this is yet another significant bow shot in the
upcoming unified client platform
war. By my
count, there are four horses in this race: Microsoft with
.NET and
Silverlight, Adobe with
Flash and
Apollo, Google with
AJAX and
Gears and Sun with
Java and
JavaFX. Did I miss
anyone? (via Dare
Obasanjo
and Scott
Hanselman)
- Alex James writes that REST
is about intent and shows a pseudo-code sample posting multiple
changes to a single endpoint as a way of demonstrating your intent
that they be applied atomically. Andres
Aguiar left a
comment saying
that Astoria does something similar. Personally, I like that model
for transactions better than the transaction factory approach Jon
Udell
describes.
But either way, you’ve moved beyond simple CRUD style services and
into the world of protocol. Surfacing intent via protocol aligns
with what Tim
described
as making the protocol explicit
- Windows Live posted new beta
versions of
Writer,
Mail
and
Messenger.
I’ve been on an internal build of the new Writer for a while and
I’ve really been impressed. There’s also a new Provider
Customization
API, so I
can’t wait to see what the DasBlog folks do with that.
- Scott Guthrie’s LINQ series
continues,
this time covering how to build the LINQ to SQL data model. Looks
like they used the DSL
toolkit to
build the LINQ to SQL data model designer, cool!
- Martin Fowler digs
intoracc,
a yacc-esque compiler compiler for Ruby. Looks interesting as a
internal DSL example (better than the now-canonical rake example).
But why is the sexy new language on the block using old school
CFG’s instead
of new hotness PEG’s?
- Speaking of Martin, he
writes about the
opportunity Ruby presents to Microsoft, building on Scott
Hanselman’s
concerns
that Microsoft is losing the Alpha Geeks. Sam Gentile also weighs
in,
suggesting that Microsoft is at the crossroads. Frankly, I don’t
work in evangelism anymore so I’m going pass these links along
without comment except to say that Scott, Martin and Sam are all
folks I have much much respect for.
Posted by devhawk.net on May 31, 2007. Filed under Development and Morning Coffee. Tagged Lanugages, LINQ, REST, Ruby, Silverlight, Unified Client & Windows Live.
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