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2/26/2008
Bungee Labs last week rolled out the full public beta of a hosted service designed to provide a complete Web-based application development environment. The new Bungee Connect service includes development tools and staging platforms for creators of browser-based business apps.
The development tools and servers all reside in the Internet cloud, and so Bungee officials use the term, "platform as a service," to describe their offering.
Platform as a service is a term also used by hosted CRM provider Salesforce.com, which offers its own Force.com version. However, Lyle Ball, Bungee Labs' vice president of marketing, drew a distinction between the two offerings, suggesting that Bungee Connect extends the cloud-based development platform across the entire software development lifecycle.
"I'm not speaking about a platform of multiple integrated disparate components from multiple companies," Ball said. "I'm not talking about, for example, Salesforce.com's model, where they have some technology and then they require an Eclipse plug-in and they have you do some work offline and then save that and put it into their system to be published to end users. But [I'm talking about] the entire lifecycle of the application -- from development through deployment and hosting. [Development on Bungee Connect] all takes place in a single environment."
Ball emphasized the advantages of not having to move Web-based applications from a test server to a staging server and then deal with the associated bugs and problems. Instead, Bungee Connect provides one environment that is live and on the Web, he said.
The service is targeted toward the professional developer, IT manager or technical business manager that wants to move to a Web-based development platform or extend existing in-house development processes. Bungee Connect apps can run inside other apps, plus developers can create them using familiar tools, Ball suggested.
"The developer's interface is going to be very familiar," he said. "Our language is a C family language, so it's going to have the broadest familiarity with developers from multiple platforms or entrenched systems. If they are in the rich Web space, they are going to encounter interactivity and AJAX controls and interoperability with browsers that are familiar to them. They are simply going to encounter all of that in an environment that accelerates the use of those tools and services and the incorporation of that functionality."
He said that the solution includes collaboration, visual modeling and retext coding tools, as well as libraries and controls, and that the environment will be "very familiar to developers who are PHP or JavaScript or .NET [coders]."
Ball distinguished Bungee Connect from mashup development tools of the past couple of years, which he described as "explorational," using a la carte toolsets for personal productivity or fun.
One catch is that applications developed using the system must run on a Bungee-hosted environment. The apps are not portable outside the Bungee Connect system, even though the developer owns the rights to them.
IBM has announced the release of new Enterprise Content Management (ECM) software specifically designed to meet the needs of clients dealing with complex legal discovery requirements. The eDiscovery solutions expand on IBM's ECM platform and are intended to give organizations greater control of digitally stored documents in an effort to reduce costs and streamline the discovery process involved in litigation.
Microsoft has released SQL Server 2008 to manufacturing (RTM) and, as an evaluation edition, to subscribers of its Microsoft Development Network and TechNet services, the company announced Wednesday.
Software vulnerabilities are up this year, especially Web browser-based ones, according to a new report from IBM Internet Security Systems. The X-Force 2008 Mid-Year Trend Statistics Report, released in late July, defined the problem broadly. A vulnerability is anything that results "in a weakening or breakdown of the confidentiality, integrity, or accessibility of the computing system."
According to the National Association of College Stores in a 2007 survey, the average cost of a new college textbook was $53. The founders of Flat World Knowledge, which launches with its first run of college textbooks this fall, consider that too high--so high, in fact, that they'll be offering textbooks for free, at least in versions that can be read online.
Panopto has released CourseCast 2.0, an update to the company's classroom capture system that's available free to academic users. CourseCast 2.0 had previously been available as part of Panopto's beta program for educators since June.
For more than twenty years, we educational technologists have talked about "integrating information technology into higher education." The implication was that education would stay the same and information technology would benignly slip in and cause no ruckus at all. This rhetoric no longer applies, if it ever did, and does a disservice to us as we work through the intricacies of this age.