> "Laszlo Rising: The Inside Story Of A Stealth Vendor's Rich 
> App Plans"


It's an interesting approach, but I wonder how well received it will be.
There were a couple quirky & errant quotes too.  One quirky one, for
example, was that they are using a "text-heavy editor".  Why!?   I
understand that Flash has a reputation for being the tool that makes
pretty web sites move around, but that doesn't mean it's not well suited
for application development.  Using a text-heavy editor instead of Flash
is like saying you should write all your rich apps in BASIC instead of
Visual Basic.  (Wasn't there something called Liberty BASIC way back
that did that?)


"You've got art assets on a stage and you attach scripts to 
 them so you've got code inside graphics... and other approaches 
 that a typical developer won't find comfortable." 

That comes back to the same idea in Visual Basic.  Although I don't
believe the code is necessarily "tied", it's the same idea.  If I have a
combo box on my application, I click on it and I see the code for it.



"The development platform will be comfortable for both 
 high-end Java developers, who can take advantage of 
 the object-oriented nature of the platform that allows 
 objects to inherit capabilities from lower-level classes"

While Flash's implementation of OO is definitely not perfect, you can
still use classes and objects, etc.


" Another target audiences is the dynamic HTML and 
 style sheet and Javascript-savvy Web developers that 
 build sophisticated Web interfaces today"

Who?  All two of them?  <g>  "Javascript-savvy" web developers are a
dying breed and for good reason -- it doesn't make sense to develop
applications in Javascript.  Don't get me wrong, I like Javascript and
you can do cool stuff in it but it's too irritating learn it when
there's so many inconsistencies between browsers.

Honestly, I don't see this technology taking over the world.  It will
probably turn out like Curl.  Actually, anybody know how Curl is doing
now?  I haven't heard that word in a long time.


Ben Johnson
Information Architect
www.architekture.com
[p] 720.934.2179
 
 

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