This link has been bookmarked by 77 people . It was first bookmarked on 02 Mar 2006, by Dan Phillips.
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Marie PerezFocus on front-end technologies that have highly visible impacts on end user experience.
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Bernard FarrellPrediction on web technology for web 2.0
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Everybody loves Ruby on Rails, except those who think it's overhyped. Regardless of where you stand on the best-since-sliced-bread/kills-puppies-for-breakfast continuum, there's a lot of development and even deployment happening on the Ruby platform. But key parts of the infrastructure are missing. Localization? Internationalization? They're a f18king pain. Scaling up servers to handle really large applications or high-demand situations? Nobody's really done that at a global scale yet. Interop with other languages? Aside from the "it's all just XML!" form of interoperability, there's a lot of unsolved problems here.
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Everybody loves Ruby on Rails, except those who think it's overhyped. Regardless of where you stand on the best-since-sliced-bread/kills-puppies-for-breakfast continuum, there's a lot of development and even deployment happening on the Ruby platform. But key parts of the infrastructure are missing. Localization? Internationalization? They're a f18king pain. Scaling up servers to handle really large applications or high-demand situations? Nobody's really done that at a global scale yet. Interop with other languages? Aside from the "it's all just XML!" form of interoperability, there's a lot of unsolved problems here.
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Everybody loves Ruby on Rails, except those who think it's overhyped. Regardless of where you stand on the best-since-sliced-bread/kills-puppies-for-breakfast continuum, there's a lot of development and even deployment happening on the Ruby platform. But key parts of the infrastructure are missing. Localization? Internationalization? They're a f18king pain. Scaling up servers to handle really large applications or high-demand situations? Nobody's really done that at a global scale yet. Interop with other languages? Aside from the "it's all just XML!" form of interoperability, there's a lot of unsolved problems here.
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11 Sep 05
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09 Sep 05
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Are Halland"(...) a list of up-and-coming trends that you should keep an eye on. Call it vocational education for people building Web 2.0." (Anil Dash)
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M GAnil Dash on damping, E4X, JSON, XHTML, CSS, Ruby on Rails, buffering, etc.
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08 Sep 05
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Caspar Van der LindenWhat's in store for Web Development in 2006.
General Business Technology WebDev Accessibility Utilities JavaScript XML Usability XMLHTTPRequest
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Curious about what technologies and techniques are going to be popular in the coming months and into the next year? Well, our crack team of editors here at dashes.com (that is to say, me) have assembled a list of up-and-coming trends that you should keep an eye on. Call it vocational education for people building Web 2.0.
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07 Sep 05
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Steve FarkasTime to get a leg up on the competition!
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