Les
géants de l’industrie du logiciel se
regroupent pour promouvoir « Open
Ajax », une initiative pour rendre le Web plus
facile à utiliser
TECH TITANS PROPOSE OPEN SOURCE PROJECTS FOR BROWSER-BOOSTING
AJAX TECHNOLOGY
"
Open Ajax" to Drive Collaborative Innovation
to Make the Web Easier to Use
Armonk, NY, February 1, 2006 - Prominent computer industry
vendors and Internet-based businesses today announced
that they are making it easier for an open-source
community to form and popularize Ajax. Ajax is a
fast-growing
open client technology that businesses are incorporating
into their external and internal Web sites to simplify
the browsing experience, and make it easier for users
to shop, work, plan, correspond and navigate online.
Ajax makes it unnecessary
to manually refresh one's browser to send or receive
information
over the Web.
Instead, information is automatically updated and available
on demand, allowing you to "drag and drop" or
input information and get a response without refreshing
the browser, much like you would do on a PC desktop.
It can reduce the steps needed to complete a transaction
over the Web or create a competitive edge for enterprise
companies and Web designers, for example.
The initial supporting members of the new initiative
-- dubbed Open Ajax -- include BEA, Borland, the Dojo
Foundation, Eclipse Foundation, IBM, Laszlo Systems,
Mozilla Corporation, Novell, Openwave Systems, Oracle,
Red Hat, Yahoo, Zend and Zimbra. They intend to promote
Ajax's promise of universal compatibility with any computer
device, application, desktop or operating system, and
easy incorporation into new and existing software programs.
Ajax -- short for Asynchronous
JavaScript and XML -- is a type of "Rich Internet Application." It
enables new Web innovations, including:
The ability to update portions of a Web page without
refreshing the entire screen. This can, for example,
enable users to scroll through a virtual map or photographs
without refreshing their browser screens. It can also
enable calendars to pop up when a user mouses over a
date in an email.
Determining, on the fly, that information typed into
a Web screen is appropriate -- such as when entering
information on an order form. This can eliminate the
delay and frustration of submitting an online form, only
to have the server flag mistakes one at a time.
Dragging and dropping of objects inside a Web browser
similar to the capabilities available on computer desktops
to move folders and documents around.
A rich set of buttons, icons, scroll bars, menus and
widgets that can ease and speed navigation, as well as
simplify information retrieval.
Ajax, similar to Web services technology, can be incrementally
adopted into existing applications and Web sites, as
needed. This characteristic makes it more cost effective
and manageable.
To enable rapid adoption of Ajax by the broadest community
of software developers, IBM has proposed the contribution
of its software to the Eclipse Foundation and Mozilla
Corporation that will allow one to develop and debug
an Ajax application. The proposed Eclipse Ajax toolkit
framework is the first approach that supports multiple
Ajax runtime toolkits. Its personality builder can typically
enable additional toolkits in less than an hour. The
runtimes presently supported are from Dojo, OpenRico
and Zimbra. Moving forward, other community members will
also be able to participate in the proposed Eclipse project
with the incorporation of other personality builders
or toolkit extensions.
San Mateo-based Zimbra, which has been developing Ajax
applications for two years, will make its Ajax runtime
toolkit available to the community under Apache and Mozilla
public licenses. The runtime toolkit provides an object-oriented
JavaScript class library with a standard set of widgets,
an event framework, and communication tools. The resulting
applications can be served from virtually any server
and run in any browser, including Internet Explorer,
Firefox and Safari. Going forward, this Open Ajax industry
initiative will also continue to be well integrated with
the Kabuki Ajax Toolkit Project recently accepted for
incubation by the Apache Software Foundation.
The Dojo Toolkit, an Open Source JavaScript library,
is an Ajax runtime that allows users to build responsive
applications using simple and powerful application program
interfaces. Applications built on Dojo easily adapt to
changing standards and browser capabilities because Dojo
is portable between HTML, SVG and other emerging standards.
Open Ajax Community Comments:
“In BEA’s AquaLogic User Interaction and
WebLogic Portal, we support Ajax as a technology for
building richer Web-based user interfaces that will significantly
improve the user experience,” said Kent Dickson,
vice president of engineering at BEA Systems. “We
also believe in the power of open-source, community
based creation and evolution of programming frameworks,
and
expect this effort to accelerate the maturation and
adoption of Ajax.”
"Developers are building rich, innovative Web applications
using Ajax that can bring exciting benefits for end users," said
Rob Cheng, director of developer solutions for Borland. "As
a leader in software development solutions, Borland
is pleased to collaborate with other industry leaders
to
advance this technology in an open, broad-based manner."
"By building a community of innovation around Open
Ajax, we are ensuring that the Web remains a place where
breakthroughs can occur and where developers can quickly
create applications to transform how businesses and people
use, interact and access information on the Internet," said
Rod Smith, vice president of emerging technologies at
IBM. "This is an important step in IBM's effort
-- on behalf of our clients -- to work with a broad
coalition of industry leaders to bring open frameworks
into computing
solutions, and we've already been embracing Ajax and
other technologies in our Lotus, Websphere and Rational
products to deliver these capabilities to businesses
around the world."
"Ajax is already changing the face of the Web and
it’s central to OpenLaszlo, an open source Web
application platform used many of thousands of developers
today,” said Kent Libbey, Chief Marketing Officer
of Laszlo Systems. “We’re delighted to
join this impressive group of technology leaders in
promoting
open Ajax platforms to accelerate the evolution of
rich and robust Web applications.”
“Ajax substantially enhances the interactivity,
performance and usability of browser-based applications,” said
Ted Farrell, Chief Architect and Vice President of Tools
and Middleware for Oracle. “Oracle is committed
to Ajax technology and many of our products including
Oracle JDeveloper 10g R3 utilize Ajax standards. As
a result, we are making it easier for developers to
reap
the benefits of Ajax today and in the next generation
of application development.”
"Ajax is gaining popularity because it enables
compelling user interfaces on the Web. PHP, with its
state-of-the-art XML support, is the infrastructure behind
many of these modern Web applications," said Andi
Gutmans, a key contributor to PHP and co-founder of Zend
Technologies. "We fully support this initiative
and believe that it ensures that Ajax remains open
and driven by community innovation."
"Ajax is sure off to a great start," said
Scott Dietzen, President or CTO of Zimbra. "But
Ajax will only achieve its potential if it remains
a multi-browser, multi-client, multi-server, and multi-tool
web standard. Open source Ajax widget toolkits like
Zimbra's
and open source Ajax authoring environments like the
IBM proposed Eclipse extensions are the best way to
protect Ajax investment today and ensuring continuing
innovation
tomorrow."
Source : IBM