Let me try again with the real suggestion i was trying to make, before
the word "X10" shot me in the foot.
Look at CF from another point of view....
Instead of only CF accessing data through harddrives and Nic cards
etc.... go for the serial port or USB ports and other hardware devices
server side, these haven't been touched with CF. CF is just a toolbox,
it started out being a way to access databases, but turns out to be a
full programming language that someone with very little experience can
get rolling in a matter of days. If accessing the USB port or serial
port could be as easy as a one line CF tag you'd have my attention.
X10 isn't the point, being able to use CF as the middle tier between
some hardware device that is server side and the database or whatever
else CF can talk to.
btw.... stop shooting down my ideas and give Jesse something to think
about.... he did ask for ideas.
Steve
Dave Watts wrote:
>
> > Being able to interact with an electrical system in a
> > building through a web server? Hmmm.... why would you
> > EVER want to be able to do that?
> >
> > Forget about doing this in a house, think about an apartment
> > building or a massive government building. Being able to know
> > when lights burn out, or who is entering what room, or when
> > there is a burst pipe, or a simple fuse blown out all through
> > the web, all interacting with a single server.
> >
> > Building management companies could manage dozens of buildings
> > across dozens of cities and know when to dispatch people within
> > minutes or even seconds of something breaking.
> >
> > That's huge man.
> >
> > Why WOULDN'T CF want to be the first web server language that really
> > dove into this area? That's ridiculous.
>
> Two points:
>
> 1. X10 isn't suitable for "real-life" stuff like this.
>
> 2. Too late. Building management has been done through computers for years,
> and there are vendors providing web interfaces for this stuff as well, or so
> my building management friends tell me. Having some experience in the
> building management field, I remember setting up OS/2 client-server building
> management systems a good seven or eight years ago. There's quite a bit of
> real-time management stuff nowadays.
>
> Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
> http://www.figleaf.com/
> voice: (202) 797-5496
> fax: (202) 797-5444
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