Sunday | 23 November, 2008
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Development/Programming

News
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    Zend adds Flash links to PHP 20/11/2008 07:06:00

    Zend Framework 1.7 upgrade also boosts performance
    Concentrating on rich Internet applications, Zend Technologies is backing Adobe's Action Message Format (AMF) in Zend Framework 1.7.
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    Ruby on Rails rolls into the enterprise 20/11/2008 12:26:00

    The New York Times used it on Election Day; YellowPages.com's site is built with it.
    The New York Times used Ruby on Rails to pull together, analyze and display election results in near real time on one of its busiest Web traffic days ever. How did nytimes.com scale up Rails -- a framework known for quick development turnaround but less than lightning fast performance?
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    Sun, IBM launch ODF tools initiative 06/11/2008 08:11:00

    Sun and IBM are behind a new effort to provide tools for the Open Document Format.
    Sun Microsystems and IBM Wednesday announced the Open Document Format Toolkit Union, an open-source project aimed at making it easier for developers to use ODF.
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    Komodo IDE for dynamic languages gets faster 05/11/2008 07:27:00

    ActiveState's updated IDE is based on Mozilla 1.9 code base
    ActiveState Software on Tuesday is releasing Version 5.0 of its Komodo IDE for dynamic languages, offering more speed, more support for distributed version control systems, and improved code-sharing across a team.
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    Aptana introduces AJAX servers 03/11/2008 08:38:00

    Aptana Jaxer 1.0 and Jaxer Pro let developers build apps using JavaScript, DOM, CSS, HTML; Mozilla Firefox browser engine is featured
    Aptana last week announced the release of Aptana Jaxer 1.0 and the introduction of Jaxer Pro, both of which are "AJAX servers" that let developers build Web applications using JavaScript, DOM, CSS, and HTML.
Features
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    Education IT chiefs debate open source 03/11/2008 14:16:00

    When does it make sense? When is it plain dumb?
    The concept of open source software seems so firmly entrenched in higher education that it comes as almost a shock to realize there's actually a debate over it. But debate there was, civilized and trenchant, this week during the annual Educause conference on high technology in higher education in the US.
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    Linux examined: Xandros Professional 25/09/2008 08:35:00

    Xandros, a commercial Linux distro, tries to be user-friendly, and for the most part, it succeeds.
    To a lot of people, Ubuntu represents the most end-user-friendly nongeek-compatible Linux distribution. But there are other commercial distributions that work even harder to create a desktop experience that is, frankly, Windows-like. The two most well-known of these are Xandros and Linspire (formerly Lindows). Since Xandros recently acquired Linspire, that leaves it pretty much in sole possession of that segment of the marketplace.
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    Is Sun Solaris on its deathbed? 25/09/2008 09:35:00

    Linux backers claim Solaris is irrelevant; Sun of course disagrees
    Linux is enjoying growth, with a contingent of devotees too large to be called a cult following at this point. Solaris, meanwhile, has thrived as a longstanding, primary Unix platform geared to enterprises. But with Linux the object of all the buzz in the industry, can Sun's rival Solaris Unix OS hang on, or is it destined to be displaced by Linux altogether?
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    Open source: What you should learn from the French 29/08/2008 09:57:00

    With open source embraced at all levels, the real benefits of a passionate community arrive
    A decade ago, European countries leapt out of the gate to take the lead in the radical open source movement -- none more so than France -- and left US developers in the proverbial dust. Through policies and high-profile projects, the French Republic for years has been advocating for all open source all the time, in government and education.
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    JavaScript 2's new direction 27/08/2008 08:40:00

    A factional fight that held up the popular language's evolution has apparently been resolved
    Standardization efforts for the next version of JavaScript have taken a sharp turn this month, with some key changes in the Web scripting technology's direction. JavaScript creator Brendan Eich, CTO of Mozilla, has helped forge a consensus on how to proceed with the direction for JavaScript's improvements. "JavaScript was sitting still. It was stagnant," he says.
Interviews
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    Open Enterprise Interview with Ryan Bagueros, North-by-South 19/06/2008 12:40:48

    Latin America is emerging as a real hotbed of open source
    Like the future, open source is already here, it's just unevenly distributed. In particular, Latin America is emerging as a real hotbed of not only free software coding, but free software uptake by governments - to an extent that puts the UK's pathetic bumblings in this area quite to shame.
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    The A-Z of Programming Languages: BASH/Bourne-Again Shell 30/05/2008 09:43:51

    When the Bourne Shell found its identity
    Computerworld is undertaking a series of investigations into the most widely-used programming languages. Previously we spoke to Alfred v. Aho of AWK fame, and in this article we chat to Chet Ramey about his experience maintaining Bash.
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    Google: OpenSocial party nearing start 25/02/2008 08:23:59

    Google Engineering Director David Glazer talks about OpenSocial
    Almost four months after Google emerged from the background in social networking with its OpenSocial initiative, there is no shortage of skepticism around the project.
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    SugarCRM eyes a public offering 11/02/2008 10:30:10

    Speaking at SugarCRM conference, the Sun CEO touts MySQL's open source model and growth rate
    SugarCRM began in 2004 and offers its Sugar CRM package via a hybrid commercial-open source model and delivers it via onsite and on-demand modes. The company has amassed more than 3,000 customers in 30 countries, SugarCRM officials said. InfoWorld Editor at Large Paul Krill met with Clint Oram, SugarCRM co-founder and vice president of open source community relations, at the company's conference in California this week to talk about the company and where it is headed.
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    phpBB3 takes giant strides from predecessor 05/02/2008 11:17:14

    Few surfers can claim that they never have visited a phpBB site. We speak to the key players of phpBB and find out why this version is better than V 2.2.
    As the world gets smaller, security threats and spam seem only to grow. PhpBB is the open source Internet Forum package that underlies a majority of the online forums on the Internet and its creators take their motto "creating communities" very seriously. All communities need to interact freely and safely, and although a long time coming, the latest release, phpBB3, has several increased security measures, as well as enhanced collaboration features and mobile optimisation.
Opinions
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    Nokia goes after Google with open-source Symbian 24/10/2008 12:51:00

    The competition to gain our hearts and money in exchange for a mobile phone just got hotter
    Nokia has announced its Symbian mobile operating system will join the likes of Android and will become an open source operating system. The announcement was made Tuesday at the Smartphone Show in London and is seen as a bid to maintain and possibly grow its developer base. This move comes at the same time Google makes its Android source code available to developers. The Nokia news contradicts previous reports on Nokia adopting Android OS.
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    5 reasons why the Android phone isn't game-changing 24/09/2008 09:54:00

    An impressive open-source base phone, but won't become game-changing until another carrier starts to support the device
    T-Mobile, HTC and Google launched the "world's first Android-powered mobile phone" today and proudly announced that this phone was going to be "game-changing". But after reading details on the phone, the service and some of the new applications, I'm left wondering where the game is actually changing.
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    What the heck is Mozilla thinking? 12/08/2008 08:53:18

    A peek behind the Mozilla curtain
    I'm continually amazed at how the premier Web properties are willing to share what they are doing. We get to peek behind the curtain routinely. Google and Yahoo both have good lab pages, but there's some seriously experimental stuff on the Mozilla labs page. Here's what they're up to.
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    PHP 4 is dead, long live PHP 4 11/08/2008 08:29:17

    The 8th of August marked the end of life for PHP 4, which has been in stable release since May, 2000. With no further security patches to come for the technology, what options are there for those who can't or won't upgrade?
    For a technology that has been in stable release since May 22, 2000, PHP 4 has finally reached the end of its official life. With the release of PHP 4.4.9, official support has ended and the final security patch for the platform issued.
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    Which platform: Cathedral or open source? 18/07/2008 10:29:35

    There are two fundamental approaches to building software, and they're often called the Cathedral and the Bazaar.
    Have you ever experienced a software bug and thought to yourself, "I could fix that"? If you could, would you? How could that even be possible?
Reviews
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    Revving up once:radix for RAD Web apps 23/07/2008 12:21:42

    GUI RAD development moves to the Web
    Need to do forms development sans Access or Filemaker? Want rapid Web apps without Ruby on Rails? Want a rich Internet interface and abhor Ajax? Need PostgreSQL development, but don't do PHP? Just want a Java application without the, well, Java? Why not check out the once:radix Web-based RAD environment from once:technologies. And, by the way, did I mention it's open source?
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