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Archive for 2008

It’s time for ColdFusion 8

Monday, March 24th, 2008

ColdFusion is a pretty cool web development language. It’s purpose is to provide a way for a website to integrate with a database server and to provide database information to web pages. This adds an extra level of functionality to website forms, reports and applications. For the longest time, Macromedia ColdFusion was stuck on version 7, even long after MacroMedia was purchased by Adobe. ColdFusion has undergone some criticism lately as well, having made a “Top 10 list” of technologies that have become obsolete. I’d argue with that statement. Sure, ColdFusion isn’t found on most of the major “paid website host” services. But Dreamweaver is the #1 selling web development platform, and ColdFusion is a large part of that platform. I don’t see ColdFusion going away any time soon.

So to me, it’s pretty good news today when I read that ColdFusion was being upgraded to version 8. It will be very interesting to see what Adobe has done here. I can’t think of a single programming language developed by Adobe that I’ve ever used or even imagine one that I could enjoy using. Macromedia did such a great job with ColdFusion, by making it easy to use and easy to learn, that Adobe has a lot stacked up against them. I can only hope that they left much of the core of ColdFusion 7 in place and only added functionality and fixed bugs. That would be enough for me to consider an upgrade for ColdFusion enabled servers that I use.

Flashback to 2004 and BEYOND: Design your websites to be cross-browser compatible

Monday, March 24th, 2008

I sat in a discussion recently with a guy (no names) who tried and tried until blue in the face to convince me that I should embrace his .NET website platform (that works on Internet Explorer 7 ONLY). Sorry pal, no such luck. And this isn’t the only time I’ve been involved with people who insist that their websites or web products are great despite the fact that you can’t use it at all without Internet Explorer. Can someone lead me to the rock where all of these poor people crawled out from under? It’s time to remove the rock and liberate these trapped souls, giving them entry back to the real world!

It was a growing trend amongst professional web designers starting in 2004 to insist that websites were designed in a way that would support all browsers. Not only Internet Explorer, but Mozilla, Opera and Safari as well. This was done for good reason. Mobile devices began to appear that could read web pages, none of them used Internet Explorer to render pages. More users began to purchase Apple Macintosh computers – this group, while small, comprises enough people to warrant the cost of making your website compatible with all browsers. Also at this time, Mozilla was starting to starting to grow and gain a descent underground following. These reasons alone were enough reason to avoid IE dependent website code like the plague, but there was more. The most important catalyst behind the shift away from Internet Explorer websites was a single idea, not tied to any single technology. People began to realize that it just made sense to build a page that everyone would be able to read and to use, no matter how they came to the page. From a business perspective, you want to make your product available to as many people as possible, not just people on one platform with one piece of software. From that single idea an entirely new set of technologies began to emerge that took advantage of standard web programming languages working cross-platform on the internet.

Fast forward to 2007. Everyone has had 3 years to read about the shift away from IE only web pages. Magazines have touted it time after time, professional web design forums and whitepapers have talked about it. Even raw data itself seems to support this shift and validate it. The growth of Mozilla Firefox has been phenomenal, most people have no concept that this browser has come as far as it has. Already on major websites on the internet, anywhere from 30% to 60% of the visitors are using Firefox to browse the web pages. That’s a large number of people! To insist that people use internet explorer only on your website potentially alienates or at least aggravates 1/3rd of your customers who would prefer to use a different browser. And it completely eliminates the other users who have no recourse to use Internet Explorer, those users browsing with an Operating System other than Windows.

Which leads me to my final point. Dell has recently put forward plans to offer computer systems pre-loaded with Linux Ubuntu. This is an operating system that doesn’t have Internet Explorer installed. WalMart also has plans to offer Linux enabled operating systems. And with the huge failure that is Windows Vista forcing people away from Microsoft products to Linux solutions in record numbers, the doors to the floodgate are already opening. I can see a future in the not-too-distant future where not only 30-40% of people on the internet using something other than Internet Explorer, they aren’t even using Microsoft Windows and thus have no Internet Explorer available to them at all.

For that reason, I’ll have to tell those people trying to push Internet Explorer only products off on me to please go somewhere else. I think they’re selling a shallow grave. Microsoft had their time and the future belongs to open standards, Mozilla Firefox and Linux.

Systems Administrator

Monday, March 24th, 2008

This article on Slashdot is pretty cool and it describes my own career experience with technology as someone who can do just about everything. In my experience companies increasingly recognize that employees who are skilled in all areas of technology are better hires than the guy who has spent years focusing on just a single task. In actuality, it’s always nice to have a mix, someone who knows everything he needs to know about a companies technology needs but also has a primary skill that he develops, such as website development. 😎 For kicks, here’s my resume .

Be careful when browsing!

Monday, March 24th, 2008

There is a nasty new virus/trojan on the loose that can easily infect the newest versions of Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox. The current version of Firefox (2.0.0.4) is easily infected with these exploits and it happens automatically in the background, you won’t even recognize that you’re being attacked without a good software firewall in place to protect your computer.

The exploits are being hosted in popular websites that are linked to sites such as DIGG, Myspace, etc. and thus far a lot of people seem to have been infected. If you think you have been infected please download and run Spybot Search & Destroy immediately as well as update your anti-virus software and do a full system scan. You should also do a full system search for the files xpre.exe, xrun.exe and poolsv.exe.

The next step if you’re still unsure is to take your computer to a PC repair professional such as those here at my PC Techs

The Apple in your Future

Monday, March 24th, 2008

Let me start by saying I have been a die-hard proponent of the Personal Computer and the x86 platform for over twelve years. All of my computer education is based upon the PC. I own my PC Techs, a small business in Phoenix, Arizona that provides technical support for the PC. I work for a company that uses Microsoft Windows computers exclusively. I have referred every person I have ever known to PC related hardware, software, and I myself have avoided alternative forms of computing, such as the Apple Macintosh, like the plague.

My dislike for Apple has at times been deeply rooted. It was over twelve years ago that I first started to read heated debates in online threads where fans of the Apple Macintosh were making insulting comments towards PC users. They made broad claims that their Apple computers were better than any PC. The hardware was faster, they said, the software easier to use and the overall experience was far better in their opinion. Their computers never crashed. Their computers did not have problems with viruses. They could not understand why anyone would choose to purchase a PC over a Macintosh; they claimed that PC users were ignorant consumers. Some even went so far as to say that the smart people only bought Macintosh while everyone who owned or worked on a PC was an idiot.

Then the PC users would arrive on the scene to these threads and respond. They claimed that Apple computers were crippled; they couldn’t run any hardware other than the expensive hardware purchased through Apple. They stated that the Apple computer only had one mouse button, making it impossible to use for advanced office tasks. PC users talked about how the Apple operating system dumbed down the user experience, and while simple to use for the average person, it lacked any advanced features or commands and hampered productivity. They made fun of Apple fans for paying twice as much for half a computer and just like the Apple fans, insulted the other side, claiming that you had to be pretty dumb to work on a Mac.

These arguments often turned ugly at this point, with pointless insults being thrown back and forth. Before long, the debate on computer platforms turned into name-calling and general chaos. At that point, my curiosity peaked. Were Apple computers really that much better than PCs? Did the Apple fans have any basis to their arguments? I kept an open mind, honestly wanting to determine which side of the argument was the right one. I turned to hardware and software reviews online and in computer magazines. I read articles from Mac and PC experts on the pros and cons of each platform.

Eventually, I came upon the truth: It turns out that the PC users were right. Not only were all of those Apple fans, in my opinion at the time, snobby and arrogant – they were also misinformed. The Macintosh had only a single mouse button and it did limit productivity. Hardware did have to be purchased directly from Apple and it was more expensive than smaller and faster PC alternatives. The software was easy to use but did lack advanced features. Sure, it was a slightly better platform if you were interested only in Graphic Design. PCs could do Graphic Design too, but they were also capable of everything else that Macintosh couldn’t do. Hardware was cheaper in a free market and there were a thousand times more pieces of software available for the PC.

Fast forward through ten years of PC dominance that saw Microsoft and Intel rise to the top of the industry while the market share for Apple computers continued to decline from highs of 15 percent down to less than 2 percent. The future of Apple looked bleak. In December of 1997, the price of Apple stock reached its lowest price in over ten years, at 3 dollars per share. Some analysts expected Apple to close shop and go away forever.

But then something major happened. While Steve Jobs had been working for Apple since 1997, in 2000 they named him the permanent, full time CEO of Apple Computer. Good things began to happen. Apple released iTunes, a revolutionary piece of software that ran not just on Apple computers, but PCs as well. The software was the first of its kind to gain approval from all of the major record labels to distribute their music in digital form. The release of this software on Windows also marked a major change from previous Apple thinking where they tried to limit all of their technology strictly to Apple computers. It was a great success and iTunes rapidly took over the market for online music distribution from the likes of Napster and Emusic.

In fact most, if not all, of the positive things Apple has done in the new millennium have been attempts at making the Apple product lines compatible with or working like their PC counterparts. First, apple made their interface device more like those of PCs when they introduced a multi-button mouse, a first for modern Apple computers. Next, starting with iTunes and continuing with other software, they began to make releases available for both PCs and Apple computers. Finally, and probably most importantly, they completely changed the hardware architecture of their computers to run on the x86 platform. For the first time, Apple computers would be able to take advantage of the same low-cost hardware supply as do other computer manufactures. Apple finally learned the lesson that while being different can sometimes be a good thing, being so completely different that no one likes you isn’t.

Just making their hardware and software work on a PC was not enough. Apple computers needed a stepping-stone to give consumers a reason to purchase Apple computer hardware. To do this, Apple looked to a niche area where traditional computer hardware vendors hadn’t yet explored. Apple recognized very early on that people increasingly wanted to bring their information along with them, all the time, everywhere they went. Even though notebook computers existed to do this, they were still too large and cumbersome to make large inroads to the market. The success of their iTunes software opened the door for Apple to introduce a mobile device that people would carry with them all the time. Enter the vision of the Apple iPod.

The future of computing is portable and everything will be handheld. In 2006, for the first time in a very long time, Apple was a visionary company ahead of the times. They had found a way to get take control of a market that did not yet exist but was eventually the future of computing – portable hand-held computing. Starting with the iPod, people could bring their music with them everywhere they went. Then newer versions of iPod allowed people to carry around not just music but also video, and everyone realized how cool it was to be able to watch their favorite movies in their hand on a plane. Finally, the iPhone, and suddenly everything was in one place on one device in the palm of your hand. You could use your phone, listen to your music, watch your movies, check your email and even surf the internet.

Meanwhile, while Apple rockets towards the future, Microsoft has spent nearly five years shooting itself in the foot. Seven years of development time to release the Microsoft Windows Vista operating system has resulted in a buggy, bloated, slow and embarrassing piece of software. Their recent operating system release is so bad that people have been begging Microsoft to let them downgrade, to remove Windows Vista from their computers and go back to Windows XP. Then there is the negative sentiment. Over the years, Microsoft has given people reason not to trust them. The overwhelming sentiment on the internet today is a dislike for Microsoft and their business practices.

Microsoft running themselves into the ground has opened the door for other companies, like Apple, to gain a foothold. No matter how much functionality is built into a portable device, and even though Apple seems firmly in control of that market, people are still going to need a computer on their desks at work. There are hacks out in the wild now that will let you run the Apple Leopard operating system on a regular PC. How long until Apple realizes the opportunity they have here? I think it’s only a matter of time before they make their operating systems install to a normal PC without a hack and sell the software directly to the PC consumer sans the Apple hardware. All of the age-old arguments for Apple computers hold true. Their operating system is easier to use, looks better and functions better than comparable Microsoft products. However, most of the old complaints have been resolved by Apple.

Can you see the day, five years or less from now, where Apple is on top of the portable and desktop/laptop computer market? I can. They have 15 billion dollars in spare cash lying around to increase their market share. I’d imagine they will use some of that money to improve the iPhone, iTunes and to find a way to get the Leopard OS on every PC. A future where everything is in one place from one company, perfectly merging an individuals need for entertainment and media with productivity and business applications, provided most likely online through Google. The future is very bright for Apple and I see no end in sight. Maybe that is why their stock has risen to an all-time high of $194/share, dwarfing that of Microsoft and other competitors. Now the word on the street is that Apple stores are packed full of people for the Christmas season. With holiday sales for computers and iPods strong, Apple is poised to gain four more percent of the personal computing market in 2007.

It certainly looks like everything is going great for Apple with more in store. However, what of those Apple fanatics from a decade ago? Looking back I can see that while wrong at the time, they were ahead of the times, just like Apple is today.


 


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