By RIA News Desk | Article Rating: |
|
March 19, 2006 12:00 PM EST | Reads: |
63,166 |

Themes: Optimism and excitement, tempered with pragmatism

The event clearly painted a picture of an industry in the midst of significant changes, in this case widespread new forms of Web-based software and services. Three overarching themes became evident as speaker after speaker got up and painted their vision for Web-based software powered by little more than Javascript, Web services, and just things that you find inside your local browser: 1) That Ajax, and related RIA technologies like Flex, are a big part of the future of the Web; 2) there are definitely major pitfalls ahead of us, and; 3) that Ajax doesn't make it any easier to create good software that's easy to use, it just makes it possible to do purely on the Web.
Also, though some are getting very good now, there was a general consenuses that enabling Ajax development tools are much needed to put it within reach of the average developer. The techniques and design patterns for Ajax are also very much in flux and still being discovered though we got a good tour of several views of this, particularly from Yahoo's Bill Scott. There was quite a sense of excitement at the conference, tempered with a little caution in both the audience and the speakers, the concern being that the Ajax popularity wave will get carried away and force the technology to be used in places it doesn't belong.
In any case, I promised to post pictures and news on the event here and I ended up writing over four pages of detailed notes and they tell the real story of what happened at this event, one of the more significant Ajax development conferences yet held. Here's a how some of the sessions broke down:

Christoph Conraents, a Senior Technical Evangelist for Adobe, gave a presentation about augmenting Ajax with Adobe Flex, a product based on Flash which is designed to turn it into an enterprise quality RIA application stack. Interestingly, though you might not think that Flash and Flex would be very relevant to Ajax, Christoph gave some compelling demonstrations that they go together better than you might think. Flash can do things in the browser that Ajax simply can't do, particularly around the richer media formats like video. In fact, Chrisoph showed a neat videoblogging application using Ajax and Flex working together, with Flex augmenting Ajax on the video side. Christoph noted that Flex "adds value when doing things that are not possible with the browser alone" and noted that Flash is on some 99% of all computers today, which is definitely less than the number of computers than can run Ajax, currently estimated at just over 90%. I do think Flex is a niche player in this space, but an indispensable niche player.

Bill Scott, Ajax Evangelist for Yahoo!, discuseed all of the work the rapidly growing Yahoo Developer Network has been putting into Ajax lately including their new Yahoo! UI Library of world-class Ajax browser widgets, their interaction design patterns library for Ajax, and even their new mashup gallery that lets regular Yahoo! users readily discover what other people are building with Ajax and the Yahoo! APIs. In my opinion, this is a brilliant Web 2.0-style move to build community around Yahoo! and their Flickr and del.icio.us platforms with associated APIs are looking like smarter acquisitions all the time. Bill Scott also outlined some excellent general guidelines for Ajax that I think are vitally important, like offering clear invitational cues so that people are encouraged to try new things and explore new Ajax application features. One of the problems with the onslaught of all this new browser software is that folks often don't have any idea how to recognize and start using the features they see, particularly since there are no user interface standards for Ajax software. But with many of the patterns and design guidelines Scott offered, I do think complex Ajax software can become much more accessible and conventions will be developed.

Much more, to come soon...
There were so many more sessions that I'll have to cover them in another post in a day or two. There were terrific product demonstrations of things like the Ajax tool Backbase by CEO Jouk Pleister, TIBCO's General Interface by Kevin Hackman, Sahil Malik of Telerik and their Ajax framework, Rob Gonda, Editor-in-Chief of the Ajax Developer's Journal and much more. I'm saving the big development products in particular for the next post to talk about the intriguing trend of traditional businesses seemingly getting quite interested in Ajax, particularly around the new SOA/Client concept.
Finally, there was an Ajax Power Panel discussion with the audience at the end of the day (which I was on) that quite interesting, though we were all quite tired of course by that time, the seminar having gone on almost 12 hours straight at that point. In any case, this Ajax conference has apparently become so popular that there are now three more dates this year on both the east and west coast and it looks like I'll be at all or most of them. Hope to see you there!
Disclaimer: Note that I am an invited delegate to the conference but I can vouch for it as a really good way to hear from and meet the folks shaping the next generation of the Web today.
posted Tuesday, 14 March 2006
Published March 19, 2006 Reads 63,166
Copyright © 2006 Ulitzer, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
Related Stories
- "Real-World AJAX" One-Day Seminar Arrives in Silicon Valley
- AJAX Rock Stars Gather in New York City To Teach "Real-World AJAX"
- "Real-World AJAX" and "Flex 2.0 & Java" Books Announced by SYS-CON Books
- AjaxWorld Conference & Expo Announced
- How "Real-World AJAX" Faculty Has Disarmed Me
- Real-World AJAX New York Conference Photo Album
- Web 2.0 News and Wrapping Up "Real-World AJAX" Seminar
- Bill Scott: Real-World AJAX Was a Blast
- AJAX Requests – Data or Markup?
More Stories By RIA News Desk
Ever since Google popularized a smarter, more responsive and interactive Web experience by using AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript + XML) for its Google Maps & Gmail applications, SYS-CON's RIA News Desk has been covering every aspect of Rich Internet Applications and those creating and deploying them. If you have breaking RIA news, please send it to RIA@sys-con.com to share your product and company news coverage with AJAXWorld readers.
![]() |
SYS-CON Australia News Desk 03/19/06 01:18:31 PM EST | |||
It was a tiring but thrilling day yesterday in Times Square at the Real-World Ajax Seminar. There was an stellar line-up of speakers including the 'Father of Ajax' himself, Jesse James Garrett, Bill Scott, Ajax Evangelist for Yahoo!, Scott Dietzen, CEO of Zimbra, David Heinemeier Hansson, creator of Ruby on Rails, Dave Crane, author of the #1 bestselling Ajax book to name just a few of the Ajax experts there. |
![]() |
SYS-CON Italy News Desk 03/14/06 08:10:22 PM EST | |||
It was a tiring but thrilling day yesterday in Times Square at the Real-World Ajax Seminar. There was an stellar line-up of speakers including the 'Father of Ajax' himself, Jesse James Garrett, Bill Scott, Ajax Evangelist for Yahoo!, Scott Dietzen, CEO of Zimbra, David Heinemeier Hansson, creator of Ruby on Rails, Dave Crane, author of the #1 bestselling Ajax book to name just a few of the Ajax experts there. |
![]() |
SYS-CON Belgium News Desk 03/14/06 07:41:05 PM EST | |||
It was a tiring but thrilling day yesterday in Times Square at the Real-World Ajax Seminar. There was an stellar line-up of speakers including the 'Father of Ajax' himself, Jesse James Garrett, Bill Scott, Ajax Evangelist for Yahoo!, Scott Dietzen, CEO of Zimbra, David Heinemeier Hansson, creator of Ruby on Rails, Dave Crane, author of the #1 bestselling Ajax book to name just a few of the Ajax experts there. |
- Google Maps and ASP.NET
- A Cup of AJAX? Nay, Just Regular Java Please
- Java Developer's Journal Exclusive: 2006 "JDJ Editors' Choice" Awards
- Building a Drag-and-Drop Shopping Cart with AJAX
- The Top 150 Players in Cloud Computing
- Who Are The All-Time Heroes of i-Technology?
- What Is AJAX?
- Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex 2 and Java
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- Google Maps! AJAX-Style Web Development Using ASP.NET