Archive for the ‘ Web ’ Category

Two Microsoft events in Cluj

Yup, a fun couple of Fridays coming up!… :D

First, April 11th, 2 pm:

Academic Tour

Microsoft | Academic Tour, UBB Cluj – where I’ll be speaking about Windows Server 2008 and SQL Server 2008.

Next, April 18th, 2 pm:

ITBoard

ITBoard Meeting, Cluj-Napoca – I’m in charge of organizing this community event, dedicated to IT Professionals in general, and the ITBoard community in particular. I’ll most likely speak about Windows Server 2008 here as well.

The links take you to the registration pages for the events. See you there! :)

Windows Server 2008 & other stuff

I’ve been a bit busy during the past few days, so I didn’t get the time to post anything on the site…

Anyway, Windows Server 2008 is now available for MSDN subscribers – the official global launch starts at the end of this month. Windows Vista SP1 is RTM as well.

On other news, the ICANN IPv6 DNS servers are up. Yay for IPv6!

Also, even if it’s already “old news”, Microsoft wants to buy out Yahoo!, and while Yahoo! is still thinking about it, Google wants to prevent it. :)

One last thingie, for a friend of mine – he’ll know what this is about: Tzeasta sux! :cool:

Google Knol to challenge Wikipedia?

Google has announced that it will soon be launching a new service/tool for worldwide users called Google Knol (short for knowledge) which will encourage authors to contribute signed encyclopedic entries into a massive knowledge base. Basically the key concept is to create a free open-source encyclopedia (just like Wikipedia) where people can come and write about any topic.

Google Knol

“The key idea behind the knol project is to highlight authors. Books have authors’ names right on the cover, news articles have bylines, scientific articles always have authors — but somehow the web evolved without a strong standard to keep authors names highlighted.”

Google says that Knol pages will be indexed into their search engine but will have no special ranking. That’s a little bit untrue, since they’ll be hosted by Google and will have the advantage of Google’s hefty PageRank to lift them in search results.

Wikipedia gets massive support from the community because it’s non-profit. Google can’t compete with that, so apparently they’re focusing on putting the authors’ names in lights and giving them a little cash on the side, too. That should help them pull some heavy Wikipedia contributors over to their project.

Google Knol is in testing phase, once testing is completed, participation in knols will be completely open. So just wait for few days and make your content ready for Knol. ;)

IE8 passes Acid2 test

Internet Explorer General Manager Dean Hachamovitch writes to inform everybody that the Acid2 face now gets rendered correctly in IE8 standards mode.

IE8 renders Acid2While it is important to note that while the test itself does not test all web standards, it is still a very significant achievement for the dominant web browser. More importantly, this means that IE8 now:

  • Interprets positioning correctly
  • Renders the box model correctly
  • Parses attribute selectors correctly
  • Supports the object element

What’s interesting to see is how IE8 will render hacks that were developed to fix IE6 and IE7’s “quirks”, since it appears that IE8 is just an updated version of the IE7 engine. It took them a while, and it’s about time, since Firefox 3 already passed the Acid2 test more than a year ago. :)

HTML 5 specifications preview

The web is constantly evolving. New and innovative websites are being created every day, pushing the boundaries of HTML in every direction. HTML 4 has been around for nearly a decade now, and publishers seeking new techniques to provide enhanced functionality are being held back by the constraints of the language and browsers.

To give authors more flexibility and interoperability, and enable more interactive and exciting websites and applications, HTML 5 introduces and enhances a wide range of features including form controls, APIs, multimedia, structure, and semantics.

Work on HTML 5, which commenced in 2004, is currently being carried out in a joint effort between the W3C HTML WG and the WHATWG. Many key players are participating in the W3C effort including representatives from the four major browser vendors: Apple, Mozilla, Opera, and Microsoft; and a range of other organisations and individuals with many diverse interests and expertise.

Note that the specification is still a work in progress and quite a long way from completion.

More details, and a preview of HTML 5, on A List Apart. :)

Popfly – public beta

Microsoft has begun the public beta test of Popfly, a mashup tool for its Silverlight cross-browser, cross-platform, streaming media technology. Company CEO Steve Ballmer made the announcement at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco on Thursday.

Popfly, which was introduced in alpha test form by Microsoft in May, is built on Silverlight. It’s designed to enable non-technical users to easily create mashups – quickly-built composite applications that combine data and functions from more than one application on a single Web page – on Silverlight.

For instance, Popfly could be used to “build a Web page for a club or organization, such as a soccer team page that would include a schedule, photos and videos from past games, [and] directions to upcoming matches,” according to one Microsoft statement.

Other technologies and application components that can be used in building Popfly mashups include Microsoft’s Virtual Earth and Live Search services. Advanced users can also use it with Visual Studio Express, another Microsoft statement said.

Many industry observers see Silverlight as a direct competitor to Adobe’s Flash technology. Whether it will displace Flash, however, is far from clear. However, if the popularity that Microsoft claims from the alpha test is any indication, it could give Flash a run for its money.

“In a little over five months since the private Popfly alpha, we’ve seen the number of users grow from about 100 to over 50,000,” S. Somasegar, corporate vice president of Microsoft’s Developer Division, said in a blog post Thursday.

The company has also partnered with social networking sites, including Facebook and Twitter, so that their features can be incorporated into Popfly mashups, he added.

But Flash is well ensconced on users’ desktops, and Microsoft has a long ways to go yet to prove that Silverlight will supersede it. Some observers are still skeptical.

“I think Popfly is really cool like Yahoo Pipes, I just don’t know if anyone’s going to use it,” said John Battelle, one of the Web 2.0 Summit’s organizers.

No final ship date has been announced for Popfly. Microsoft shipped version 1.0 of Silverlight last month. The Popfly beta, which requires Silverlight 1.0, is available here.

REMIX-07 in Budapest

Earlier this week, I went to Budapest with a friend of mine in order to attend REMIX’07. REMIX is an event that brings the Las Vegas MIX content in different locations around the world (e.g. EMEA). For those of you who don’t know, “the” MIX is Microsoft’s annual conference for web designers, developers and decision-makers.

The event agenda was quite interesting – I myself focused on the design path. It all started with Scott Guthrie‘s keynote on the tools and technologies Microsoft has built for Web developers and designers to help them work better together. Then came Pete LePage with a very interesting discussion on SEO-related issues when it comes to rich media content. On Tuesday, I went to Steve Marx‘s session on AJAX patterns – awesome stuff! I also enjoyed Molly Holzschlag’s sessions on web standards, CSS and IE7. There were some other cool sessions, such as Wayne Smith‘s presentation on Expression Blend or Beau Ambur’s talk on developing web apps with Silverlight. They haven’t published the presentations on the site yet, and I don’t know if they will – but they shouldn’t be very different from the ones in Las Vegas.

All in all, the event was pretty well organized and put together. The location (Budapest Museum of Fine Arts) was pretty exotic for a tech conference, which made the whole thing even more enjoyable. One slightly annoying thing with this is that the large room where they held the development track presentations had a rather strong echo, that distorted the voice of the speaker a bit. Luckily, I attended the design track, which was held in a room that didn’t have this problem. :)

We’ve had a few hours to go for a walk around the city, and we were also invited on a boat trip on the Danube on Monday evening. Budapest is a great city, and I’ll definitely visit it again when I get the chance. You can check out some of the pictures I took while I was there.