Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
The OpenAjax Alliance is developing an AJAX industry wishlist for future browsers, using a dedicated wiki for this initiative. The main purpose of the initiative is to inform the browser vendors about what future features are most important to the AJAX community and why. So far, the alliance has interviewed roughly a dozen industry leaders, including representatives from the ASP.NET AJAX, Dojo, Ext JS, Douglas Crockford of JSON fame, jQuery, Spry, and XAP, and recently held a townhall discussion on the feature request list among its members. The members have concluded that the wishlist (~25 items) is ready for public comments.
The alliance is now issuing a call-to-action to AJAX developers to participate in this initiative, which is open to both OpenAjax Alliance members and to non-members. The alliance especially would like participation from AJAX toolkit developers and leading web developers with expertise in using open browser technologies to achieve rich user experiences. To join the effort, create a wiki login for yourself by following the instructions on the wiki home page. After you have a login, you can then add new feature requests or comment on existing feature requests as you see fit. The initiative operates on an honor-system basis.
The moderators have attempted to make it possible that the community can add comments and vote on particular feature requests without large time commitments. For example, it is possible to simply vote for your favorite feature requests by adding a single row to a wiki table. The alliance's wiki uses the same markup language as wikipedia.
Here is the timeline:
April - Phase I review, where participants not only add comments, but also are asked to identify their Top 5 features (i.e., those features that are most critical for inclusion in next-generation browsers).
May - The moderators reorganize and possibly trim away feature requests for which little interest was shown.
June - Phase II review, where participants will be asked to provide importance ratings for each of the feature requests on a scale of 0.0 to 5.0.
July - The moderators will produce a summary report and notify the major browser vendors about the results.
October's AJAXWorld Conference is already receiving
higher-caliber submissions from all over the Rich Internet Applications, User
eXperience & UI ecosphere.
The theme of this October's AJAXWorld
Conference & Expo 2008 West is 'Beyond AJAX to the RIA Era' and the Call for
Papers, which is now open, specifically encourages submissions from exceptional
speakers with high-quality use cases of the fast-emerging RIA
alternatives.
Submissions featuring such use cases as well as on dozens
of other RIA topics have already begun streaming in to AJAXWorld Conference
& Expo 2008 West, being held in San Jose, CA, on October 20-22, 2008.
About Jon Ferraiolo Jon Ferraiolo is an employee of IBM within its Emerging Internet Technologies group. Jon is devoted exclusively to OpenAjax Alliance, where he manages operations and leads many activities.Before joining IBM in 2006, Jon worked at Adobe for 13 years where he was an architect, engineering manager and product manager.
Jon has been a speaker at every AJAXWorld conference since October 2006, and has spoken at dozens of other industry conferences in the past couple of years. AJAXWorld magazine has published 6 or 7 articles Jon has submitted over the past couple of years.
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