A New Year and a New
Direction By Bruce Armstrong  I received an e-mail from
a loyal reader recently
complaining that the
magazine was no longer
'primarily about
PowerBuilder.' The charge
is actually true and,
despite the title of this
column, is not
particularly new. In
fact, we had an editorial
eight years ago
explaining part of that
shift (http://pbdj.sys-co
n.com/read/42184.htm).
That shift has continued,
and this editorial will
explain some of the
reasons for that. Mar. 18, 2008 02:00 PM Reads: 1,771 |
PBDJ Editorial: Is RAD
Dead? By Bruce Armstrong  Well, if you listened to
Rob Enderle of Enderle
Group (www2.sdtimes.com/p
df/SDTimesBackIssues/sdti
mes184.pdf) you might
think that Rapid
Application Development
(RAD) is dead or dying.
However, I think it's
important to distinguish
between two different
things that are often
lumped together and
called RAD. One is the
RAD development
methodology and the other
is 4GL tools that were
often used in RAD
development. Mar. 4, 2008 01:00 PM Reads: 1,744 |
PBDJ Editorial: We Live
in Interesting Times... By Bruce Armstrong  That isn't, by the way, a
Chinese curse. The phrase
'may you live in
interesting times' (which
became popular after
Robert Kennedy used it in
a speech in 1966)
probably originated from
a 1950's science fiction
story. Regardless of its
roots though, we find
ourselves living in such
times. In a previous
issue I talked about the
incremental releases that
Sybase was doing for
PowerBuilder 11. Feb. 27, 2008 11:00 AM Reads: 1,897 |
Aliens Take Over
Sybase... By Bruce Armstrong  Or well, perhaps it just
seems that way. Like the
Dilbert strip where
aliens kidnap the PHB and
one of them impersonates
him. They all notice
because he's suddenly
more competent and
caring, so they don't
report it. Sybase
released PowerBuilder
11.0 in June of 2007 and
hyped it at TechWave in
August. 11.1 was (as I
write this) recently
announced and expected to
be delivered in
mid-November. Jan. 6, 2008 08:45 AM Reads: 5,784 |
TechWave 2007 - A Few
Last Recommendations By Bruce Armstrong  As I've mentioned
previously, TechWave 2007
was (IMHO) one of the
best TechWaves we've had
in years. Nonetheless,
there is always room for
improvement. I've made
some specific comments in
my blog, but there are a
few general suggestions
that are the most
important. Quite a few
Sybase customers are
large corporations or
government agencies that
have long approval cycles
for travel. Nov. 1, 2007 11:00 AM Reads: 4,240 |
PowerBuilder Editorial
— Welcome to
TechWave 2007! By Bruce Armstrong  As with previous
TechWaves, there are once
again a number of
changes. The most obvious
one is that this year's
event is at the Mandalay
Bay Resort and Casino
rather than Caesar's
Palace. While not the
complete move out of
Vegas that I was hoping
for, at least it's an
improvement. Aug. 24, 2007 03:00 PM Reads: 5,265 |
What Do You Want to See
in PowerBuilder 12? By Bruce Armstrong  What do you want to see
in PowerBuilder 12?
That's not just my
question for you this
month, it's also Sybase's
question for you as well.
Two things demonstrate
that. The first is the
recent invitation to
participate in a survey
by Sue Dunnell,
PowerBuilder's product
manager, so PowerBuilder
users could 'provide some
feedback to us as we plan
for the next major
release of PowerBuilder.' Jul. 25, 2007 06:30 PM Reads: 7,570 Replies: 1 |
PowerBuilder Editorial
— I'm Not Dead! By Bruce Armstrong  Every few years somebody
winds up the
'PowerBuilder is dead'
argument, and every few
years we beat it down
again. This time it's
Mary Brandel of
ComputerWorld and her
list of the 'top 10 dead
(or dying) computer
skills' (www.computerworl
d.com/action/article.do?c
ommand=printArticleBasic&
articleId=9020942). Jul. 3, 2007 08:30 AM Reads: 8,452 Replies: 2 |
PowerBuilder Editorial
— Learn a Lesson
from the Wii By Bruce Armstrong  I just recently (finally)
upgraded to a Wii, and I
only had to pay about $50
over retail on an auction
site to get it. Good luck
trying to find one in the
LA area; most stores told
me it would be at least a
month before they had
more. Then try finding
accessories once you have
one. I had to hit a half
a dozen stores before I
found additional
controllers. It's not
because the stores don't
carry them; it's because
they fly off the shelves
as soon as they come in. Jun. 2, 2007 05:00 PM Reads: 14,575 Replies: 1 |
PBDJ Editorial —
Top 11 Reasons to
Consider PowerBuilder 11 By Bruce Armstrong  Just over a year ago
PowerBuilder 10.5 was
about to release and we
looked at the top 10.5
reasons to move to that
version. In that same
vein, I'm going to look
at the top 11 reasons to
consider PowerBuilder
11.0, which is just about
to hit the street. This
time I'm going to break
those reasons into two
groups: those that
directly affect your end
users (things they will
notice) and thing that
will make your life as a
developer easier but
won't necessarily affect
your users. The reason I
want to focus on them
that way is because as
developers we often get
excited about the second
set, but in order to sell
an upgrade to our
managers we often need to
stress the former. Jun. 2, 2007 02:45 PM Reads: 9,559 |
PowerBuilder Editorial
— Would the Real
"PB-to-the-Web" Solution
Please Stand Up? By Bruce Armstrong  Over the years we've been
offered, either by Sybase
or by third-party
companies, a number of
'move PowerBuilder to the
Web' offerings. Focusing
specifically on those
offered by Sybase, we
were first offered
Web.pb. It was provided
as a set of libraries
with PowerBuilder 6 that
was built on the
Distributed PowerBuilder
(DPB) technology
introduced with
PowerBuilder 5. It
actually worked fairly
well for developing Web
front-ends to non-visual
components in an n-tier
environment. However, its
dependence on DPB spelled
its doom once DPB was
de-supported in favor of
EAServer. Mar. 12, 2007 02:00 PM Reads: 8,406 Replies: 1 |
PBDJ Editorial —
PocketBuilder,
PocketBuilder! Wherefore
Art Thou PocketBuilder! By Bruce Armstrong  (OK, let me start off by
acknowledging that in the
literary work I am
alluding to, Juliet is
not asking this question
because she's looking for
Romeo. She's actually
lamenting that he comes
from the rival family.
But it's so commonly
misunderstood that I
thought it would be
useful nonetheless.) Feb. 1, 2007 01:00 PM Reads: 7,235 |
PowerBuilder Editorial
— What's Ahead in
the New Year... By Bruce Armstrong  About this time of year
folks make their
predictions about what's
coming up in the New
Year. Not to be left out,
here's mine, along with
my thoughts on what these
events will mean for you. Jan. 18, 2007 12:45 PM Reads: 7,751 |
PowerBuilder Editorial
— New Releases By Bruce Armstrong  New features of this
release include the
DataWindow Designer
Visual Studio Plug-in.
This is a set of plug-ins
for Microsoft Visual
Studio 2005. It enables
users to design
DataWindow objects
directly in Visual Studio
instead of in the
standalone DataWindow
Designer from the
previous versions. The
standalone DataWindow
Designer will not be
distributed with
DataWindow.NET 2.5. Jan. 11, 2007 12:15 AM Reads: 7,377 |
PBDJ Editorial — No
More 80% Solutions By Bruce Armstrong  It may be a bit early,
but I have a New Year's
resolution I'd like to
propose to Sybase: 'No
more 80% solutions.' What
is an 80% solution? It's
a technology approach
that seems well conceived
and when used with small
demonstration
applications (e.g., beta
testing) works well. Dec. 8, 2006 02:00 PM Reads: 7,647 |
PBDJ Editorial —
TechWave 2006 Wrap up By Bruce Armstrong  It took me a while to
mull over what I thought
about the conference, but
the following is my take
on it. This year at
TechWave the Game Show
was held during the
reception, where food and
drink were served. In a
similar mode, many of the
meals were served in the
exhibit hall. As I
mentioned earlier, that
particular format seemed
to work well. There also
didn't seem to be as many
problems as there were
last year with having
enough food or providing
it fast enough. Nov. 8, 2006 12:00 PM Reads: 7,968 Replies: 4 |
PBDJ Editorial —
Winning Back Expatriate
PB Developers By Paul Horan  Yes, Virginia, Sybase
does have a
J2EE-compatible
application server, and
it's known as EAS, short
for Enterprise
Application Server. In
fact, EAS is alive and
well, and this issue of
the PowerBuilder
Developer's Journal will
focus on the recent
release of version 6.0. Oct. 29, 2006 01:30 PM Reads: 8,147 |
PowerBuilder Editorial
— TechWave 2006 By Bruce Armstrong  Welcome to TechWave 2006!
The structure of the
conference has changed
significantly this year.
The two- and four-day
a.m. education courses
are gone, at least in
that format. This year
what were the two-day
classes are given in a
single five-hour session
on either Monday or
Tuesday afternoon. What
were the four-day a.m.
courses are given in a
single 10-hour session
all day Tuesday. Aug. 9, 2006 07:30 PM Reads: 9,715 Replies: 3 |
Innovate or Die By Bruce Armstrong  PowerBuilder has almost
entirely lost mind share.
In order to reintroduce
PowerBuilder to a new
generation of developers,
Sybase should treat it
like a new product. When
it was originally being
developed, PowerSoft used
the product internally
and also partnered with
clients, providing them
with insight into what
new features and
improvements to existing
features were needed.
That same kind of insight
is missing today. By
partnering with key
customers, Sybase can
gain better knowledge
about how the product is
currently being used and
which areas need
improvement. Jun. 28, 2006 12:45 PM Reads: 9,838 Replies: 3 |
PBDJ Editorial —
Introducing
DataWindow.NET 2.0 and
Looking Ahead By Bruce Armstrong  This month we'll take an
in-depth look at the new
features introduced or
existing features
enhanced in
DataWindow.NET 2.0. In
summary, DataWindow.NET
20 includes the
following: May. 12, 2006 12:00 PM Reads: 9,637 |
Top 10.5 Reasons to Use
PowerBuilder 10.5 By Bruce Armstrong  This month we take an
in-depth look at the new
features introduced or
existing features
enhanced in PowerBuilder
10.5. Even though it is
not a full point release,
it (like 6.5) is a full
major release. In order
to get many of these
enhancements to the user
(you and me) sooner,
Sybase split off a subset
of the original
enhancements planned for
the 11.0 release. The
stuff that is centered
around .NET deployment
remains in the 11.0
feature set. In the
meantime, the features
that were not .NET
deployment-related are
available now. Mar. 15, 2006 03:00 PM Reads: 13,972 |
PowerBuilder Editorial:
Déjà Vu All Over Again... By Bruce Armstrong  Back in the late 1980s I
was using a data
management tool known as
DataEase. At the time it
was a DOS-based tool that
communicated only with
its own proprietary
database files.
Essentially it was a
competitor to dBase, but
one that was more
network-aware and
provided better
screen-generation
capability. Feb. 27, 2006 03:15 PM Reads: 9,885 Replies: 1 |
PowerBuilder DataWindow
vs DataGridView Smackdown By Bruce Armstrong  For the past three months
I've been looking at new
products or new versions
of products that Sybase
is introducing and
reviewing some of my
concerns with them. My
general sense is that
Sybase is often headed in
the right direction, but
that they're moving too
slowly. In no place is it
more obvious than when it
comes to the core item
that ties all these
products together: the
DataWindow. In this
fourth and final month
I'll be looking at the
Sybase product that is
essentially nothing but
the DataWindow:
DataWindow.NET. Jan. 25, 2006 08:30 PM Reads: 11,929 Replies: 1 |
JavaServer Faces
DataWindow By Bruce Armstrong  A few months ago I
promised to look at four
new or updated
technologies coming from
Sybase and discuss my
concerns with each of
them. So far we've looked
at the deployment to
ASP.NET feature coming in
PowerBuilder 11 and the
Application Server
Plug-in for PowerBuilder
that is being introduced
simultaneously with (but
as a separate product
from) EAServer 6.0. This
month I'll be looking at
the JSF DataWindow and
next month I'll be
covering DataWindow.NET. Jan. 13, 2006 01:30 PM Reads: 9,497 Replies: 1 |
ASP.NET Application
Deployment With Sybase
PowerBuilder By Bruce Armstrong  Last month I started a
series in which I'll be
looking at some of the
important new technology
offerings Sybase showed
at TechWave and share
with you my comments
(good or bad) about those
technologies. Nov. 7, 2005 12:30 PM Reads: 16,253 Replies: 1 |
PowerBuilder: I Have Seen
the Future, and It's Not
Enough... By Bruce Armstrong  Or, more specifically,
it's not coming quickly
enough. With regard to
the future of
PowerBuilder and related
technologies, there were
several significant
product directions
announced and/or
demonstrated at TechWave
2005. What I would like
to focus on is four of
them: the new
PowerBuilder Application
Server Plugin (PASP), the
ASP.NET Application
Deployment option that
will be available in
PowerBuilder 11,
enhancements to
DataWindow.NET, and the
new JavaServer Faces
(JSF) DataWindow. (See my
TechWave Report in this
same issue for addtional
information.) This month
I'll comment specifically
on the Application Server
Plugin and I'll address
the others in upcoming
months. Oct. 12, 2005 04:00 PM Reads: 9,740 Replies: 1 |
Top 10 Features to Remove
from PowerBuilder By Bruce Armstrong  Two months ago I
discussed what I thought
were the top 10 features
that should be added to
PowerBuilder. Last month
I discussed some of the
new features that Sybase
had indicated would be
incorporated in the
recently announced PB
version 10.5. This month
I want to take a
different approach and
look at the top 10
features that Sybase
should remove from
PowerBuilder. Aug. 31, 2005 01:45 PM Reads: 10,399 Replies: 2 |
What's Coming in the Next
Version of PowerBuilder? By Bruce Armstrong  Last month my editorial
was about 'must-have'
improvements in
PowerBuilder. Well,
shortly after that piece
was written we got a
sneak peak at the
enhancements coming in
the next version of
PowerBuilder. Aug. 5, 2005 10:00 AM Reads: 11,025 |
Must-Haves for the Next
Version of PowerBuilder By Bruce Armstrong  A while back I took the
new features I suggested
in my PBDJ editorial last
year, all the input from
last TechWave's
enhancement section
discussion, and all of
the suggestions from a
long thread a while back
in the sybase.public.powe
rbuilder.future
_directions forum, and I
entered them into the
ISUG enhancement request
system. Jun. 29, 2005 10:00 AM Reads: 7,838 |
Blogging - Everyone's
Doing It By Bruce Armstrong  Keeping up with all the
blogs out there can be
time-consuming, which is
why I decided to present
some excerpts from my
blog (http://blog.pbdjmag
azine.com) in this
month's editorial. May. 9, 2005 10:00 AM Reads: 14,683 |
XP Text Search Broken... By Bruce Armstrong Have you ever done a
search for files
containing a specific
text with Windows
Explorer and gotten no
results even though you
know the files are there?
Well, if you're using XP,
chances are the problem
is that XP only returns
results for files whose
extensions have a
'PersistentHandler' value
in the registry. Apr. 2, 2005 09:00 AM Reads: 12,473 Replies: 1 |
A PowerBuilder Revolution By Terry Voth Revolutions often don't
happen as a result of the
force of will of one
person or group of
persons, but as a result
of an alignment of
factors that come
together in unexpected
ways. As an extreme
example, World War II
didn't occur as a result
of one man's actions, but
resulted from a series of
social, political, and
economic factors. Apr. 2, 2005 09:00 AM Reads: 6,473 |
Uncomfortable and
Enthusiastic By Berndt Hamboeck As I'm writing this
editorial I have to say
I'm a bit nervous. Not
because I'm writing my
first column as a guest
editor for this issue of
PBDJ (though this is
something special for me
and I want to say thank
you to the people who
made this possible), it's
because I'm preparing for
the annual TeamSybase
meeting in San Francisco.
I'll be meeting the best
of the best, who support
the products I love, and
I'll also be meeting the
managers of these
products. This is indeed
something special and I'm
proud to be a part of
this team. Mar. 1, 2005 12:00 AM Reads: 5,402 |
Is Information Technology
Off Life Support? By Bob Hendry We may have seen the
bottom. After three years
of IT dark ages, there's
some real evidence that
after years of budget
cuts, 2004 promises more
jobs and projects for all
of us. Jan. 9, 2004 12:25 PM Reads: 8,666 |
PBDJ's Tenth Year By John Olson Believe it or not 2004 is
the tenth year I'll be
writing for PBDJ! I can't
believe it myself. This
magazine debuted back in
1994 when PowerBuilder
was the hottest
client/server software
development tool in the
world. Jan. 9, 2004 12:00 PM Reads: 8,918 |
Everyone Works Better
When Everyone Works
Together By John Olson Recently I was at a
Sybase event and an IT
supervisor/PB developer
approached me and asked
why the new features in
PowerBuilder were almost
entirely for Web and
n-tier and only a few
were for client/server
development. First, tools
that are purely for
client/server development
are dead and dying,
though client/server
development is alive and
well. Dec. 3, 2003 02:00 PM Reads: 8,838 |
The Next Killer App By Bob Hendry I can't believe it's
almost 2004. Sounds so
futuristic right? By now
I'm sure all of you work
35-hour weeks and take
two-month vacations. Your
office is a relic of the
past. With advances in
teleconferencing and
telecommunications, you
all work comfortably in
your home. Dec. 3, 2003 02:00 PM Reads: 8,927 |
Surviving Layoffs By Bob Hendry Over the past three years
I have witnessed many
rounds of layoffs. I
consider myself lucky.
Since 1996 I have worked
exclusively on a
consulting basis. So in
theory, I have no job to
lose. This, of course,
means I always have to
look for a job, since no
project lasts forever. Nov. 12, 2003 10:00 AM Reads: 8,639 Replies: 1 |
Avoid Being Outsourced By John Olson Products and markets have
well-defined life cycles
that vary in amplitude
and length, but follow
historical patterns. As
Bob Hendry described in
his editorial in last
month's issue ('Is IT
Outsourcing Worth It?'
[Vol. 10, issue 10]), the
IT outsourcing craze is
in full swing. Nov. 12, 2003 10:00 AM Reads: 10,528 Replies: 2 |
What's in a Name? By John Olson While studying computer
science at the University
of California in Santa
Barbara, I worked for a
company named
Inter-Continental Telex
(ICT). The name implied a
large corporation with
offices in major cities
around the world. Oct. 3, 2003 02:00 PM Reads: 9,726 Replies: 1 |