| By Rick Hightower | Article Rating: |
|
| May 19, 2006 10:45 AM EDT | Reads: |
44,714 |
Certainly, in the recent past, the chances of doing an entire application in AJAX seemed remote for the vast sea of developers. The thought of writing a rich application in JavaScript, for most developers, is total anathema - akin to having one's body shaved and thrust into a pool of warm alcohol.
Please don’t write and plead for a change in my aversion to writing metric tons of JavaScript, for my heart isn't in it - as most developers' hearts aren't in it. It is not so much the writing of JavaScript as it is the lack for tools...and the horror of debugging it. Sure tools exist but they are a far cry from what you get in the Java world.
Writing JavaScript is like changing a baby’s diaper: you don’t like to do it, but you love your child and you do it anyway. You may not like to write JavaScript, but you want to deliver richer applications for your end users so you may do it anyway. Dare I say the best developers are the ones that love their end-users?
Thus the missing ingredient is the ability for Java developers to develop AJAX applications in Java instead of JavaScript, i.e., to take the smell and rank out of it. This would allow a vast community of developers to develop rich web applications where before a select few script-heads would dare go.
Enter stage left the contender for changing the way, once and for all, the world uses the web: Google!
Google just introduced the Google Web Toolkit (GWT), a free, publicly available Java development framework. This framework allows developers to develop and debug applications in Java and deploy them in AJAX. The Google approach to AJAX development is to avoid JavaScript (for most developers anyway).
You can write all of your AJAX code in plain old Java. You can debug it. Use breakpoints.
They have a plug-in where they allow your code to run in the browser and hook back to your Java code. Then when your code is ready to deploy, you run the translator that converts your Java code into JavaScript code that can run on any browser - or so the vision states. They also have an RPC mechanism to call back to Java objects on the server for data and business rule validation. The Java code looks like AWT, Swing or perhaps SWT code. In other words, it is what most rich GUI app developers are familiar with.
The framework is also extensible, so if your favorite Dojo JavaScript widgets don’t exist you can extend the framework to support them. Most developers won’t have to do this, but you can.
One of the Google examples is an Outlook clone. It doesn't look like a web application. It looks like a rich application. If it all seems too good to be true, you are right. However, if even half of it is true, this changes everything.
Cynicism is good. Without cynicism you will be driven hither and dither, to and fro, back and forth with each new buzzword, and vendor marketing claims. However, cynicism must be balanced with potentially the most disruptive technology. The mantra at JavaOne seems to be JSF, JSF, JSF, NetBeans, NetBeans, NetBeans,. AJAX, AJAX, and AJAX. Never mind that Eclipse is the dominant developer platform by far, and most vendors that have a plug-in seem to target Eclipse first, and certainly Google has followed this model with model with GWT and released with Eclipse plug-ins.
Among the noise, there is this announcement from a company that started the AJAX phenomenon and has the most popular AJAX applications. Is this announcement from Google the most important announcement for AJAX and the most important announcement at JavaOne? It is too soon to tell if this is the most important message at JavaOne 2006 due to how much reality and robustness is in the GWT, but the potential is there. Time will tell.
Published May 19, 2006 Reads 44,714
Copyright © 2006 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
- i-Technology Viewpoint: "Spring Good!"
- The Next Programming Models, RIAs and Composite Applications
- i-Technology Viewpoint: "SOA Sucks"
- i-Technology Viewpoint: When to Leave Your First IT Job
- i-Technology Viewpoint: The New Paradigm of IT Buying
- i-Technology Viewpoint: "Pessimism Leads to Weakness, Optimism to Power"
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Is Model Driven Architecture Coming Into Its Own?
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Death to the Browser
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Attack of the Blogs
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Are We Blogging Each Other To Death?
- i-Technology Blog: Can Blogging Change the World?
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Is Web 2.0 the Global SOA?
- i-Technology Viewpoint: The Five Dimensions of Blogs
- i-Technology Blog: Death-Knell For "Rich Media? Hardly!
- i-Technology Viewpoint: We Need Not More Frameworks, But Better Programmers
- i-Technology Viewpoint: What Are the Drivers of Social Software's Success?
- i-Technology Viewpoint: It's Time to Take the Quotation Marks Off "Web 2.0"
- i-Technology Blog: Google Trends on Java, McNealy, AJAX, and SOA Give Pause For Thought
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Does Adobe Flash Need Re-Branding?
- Advertising on Google.com Requires No Personally Identifiable Information (PII), States Executive
- "To Google" Is Officially a Verb: A Behind-the-Scenes History
- Google Is Ten: The Search Engine That Changed the World
- Human Error Causes One Hour's Google Search Chaos
More Stories By Rick Hightower
Rick Hightower serves as chief technology officer for ArcMind Inc. He is coauthor of the popular book Java Tools for Extreme Programming, which covers applying XP to J2EE development, and also recently co-authored Professional Struts. He has been working with J2EE since the very early days and lately has been working mostly with Maven, Spring, JSF and Hibernate. Rick is a big JSF and Spring fan. Rick has taught several workshops and training courses involving the Spring framework as well as worked on several projects consulting, mentoring and developing with the Spring framework. He blogs at http://jroller.com/page/RickHigh.
![]() |
answer 05/18/06 05:06:26 PM EDT | |||
/// Is this announcement from Google the most YESSSS!!!! |
||||
- Why SOA Needs Cloud Computing - Part 1
- Cloud Expo and The End of Tech Recession
- The Transition to Cloud Computing: What Does It Mean For You?
- A Rules Engine Built in PowerBuilder
- Sybase Named “Silver Sponsor” of iPhone Developer Summit
- How PowerBuilder Got Its Groove Back
- The Cloud Has Cross-Border Ambitions
- Ulitzer Names The World's 30 Most Influential Virtualization Bloggers
- Ulitzer Named "New Media" Partner of Greatly Anticipated iStrategy Event in Berlin
- Risks and Enterprise Mobility?
- Steps for Success in Enterprise Mobility?
- Are Mobile Luddites Resisting Mobility?
- The Difference Between Web Hosting and Cloud Computing
- Sybase CTO to Speak at 4th International Cloud Computing Expo
- Why SOA Needs Cloud Computing - Part 1
- Cloud Expo and The End of Tech Recession
- The Transition to Cloud Computing: What Does It Mean For You?
- Five Reasons to Choose a Private Cloud
- Seeding The Cloud: The Future of Data Management
- The Threat Behind the Firewall
- Economy Drives Adoption of Virtual Lab Technology
- Tips for Efficient PaaS Application Design
- A Rules Engine Built in PowerBuilder
- Sybase Named “Silver Sponsor” of iPhone Developer Summit
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- PowerBuilder History - How Did It Evolve?
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- Custom Common Dialogs Using SetWindowsHookEx
- DDDW Tips and Tricks
- OLE - Extending the Capabilities of PowerBuilder
- DataWindow.NET How To: Data Entry Form
- Book Excerpt: Sybase Adaptive Server Anywhere
- Sybase ASE 12.5 Performance and Tuning
- Working with SOA & Web Services in PowerBuilder
- Office 2003 Toolbar: A New Look For Your Old PowerBuilder App
- Dynamically Creating DataWindow Objects

































