| By Jon Ferraiolo | Article Rating: |
|
| May 30, 2008 03:00 AM EDT | Reads: |
2,511 |
The OpenAjax Alliance is requesting industry feedback on two companion initiatives, OpenAjax Conformance and the OpenAjax Registry, which have been under development for the past year.
The term OpenAjax Conformance is shorthand for the set of conformance requirements that OpenAjax Alliance places on Ajax technologies, products, and applications to promote interoperability. Version 1 of OpenAjax Conformance defines 10 specific conformance requirements on Ajax runtime libraries. An AJAX runtime library that meets these conformance requirements will allow Web developers to use that library conveniently within a given Web page with other OpenAjax Conformant libraries.
OpenAjax Conformance provides the following benefits to IT managers and the AJAX developer community:
- Seamless integration of multiple AJAX products and technologies within the same Web application, particularly with applications that use mashup techniques
- Greater certainty about product choices, where OpenAjax Conformance plays a similar role in the AJAX community as the Good Housekeeping Seal does with consumer products
- Lower training costs, lower development costs, and faster delivery of Web 2.0 innovations due to industry adoption of common approaches that build from OpenAjax standards
- Interchangeability of OpenAjax Conformant products, such that customers can choose among multiple vendors (and change vendors in the future)
OpenAjax Conformance defines three conformance levels. Full Conformance is for AJAX products that have sufficiently strong Ajax interoperability characteristics that there is high expectation that the given product can be used successfully and conveniently with other Ajax products as part of the same AJAX development task. Configurable Conformance is for AJAX products that support all of the same strong interoperability characteristics as for Full Conformance, except not in their default configuration. Limited Conformance is for products that meet a particular subset of the conformance criteria, and therefore have taken important steps towards AJAX industry interoperability, but on the question of whether the given AJAX product can interoperate successfully and conveniently with other Ajax products, the answer is "it depends".
The OpenAjax Registry is a centralized, industry-wide AJAX registration authority managed by the Interoperability Working Group at OpenAjax Alliance. The Registry maintains an industry-wide list of AJAX runtime libraries and various characteristics of each library. For each library, the Registry lists:
- JavaScript globals
- runtime extensions (both JavaScript and DOM)
- markup extensions (e.g., custom elements, attributes or CSS class names)
These two technologies have now entered a public review phase that ends on June 30, 2008. Feedback can come in various forms, such as email to public@openajax.org, or comments posted on various industry blogs. After the public review phase ends, the members of OpenAjax Alliance will adjust the two specifications to take the feedback into account and then move the two specifications towards version 1.0 completion and approval.
Published May 30, 2008 Reads 2,511
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Jon Ferraiolo
Jon Ferraiolo is an employee of IBM within its Emerging Internet Technologies group. Jon is devoted exclusively to OpenAjax Alliance, where he manages operations and leads many activities.Before joining IBM in 2006, Jon worked at Adobe for 13 years where he was an architect, engineering manager and product manager.
Jon has been a speaker at every AJAXWorld conference since October 2006, and has spoken at dozens of other industry conferences in the past couple of years. AJAXWorld magazine has published 6 or 7 articles Jon has submitted over the past couple of years.
- Microsoft’s First Step Toward Cloud Computing
- Adobe Flex Developer Earns $100K in New York City
- Jill T. Singer of CIA to Present at Cloud Computing Expo on November 2
- Visual Studio 2010 Is Cloud Friendly
- SplendidCRM for Microsoft Windows Azure
- Microsoft Falls Off Cliff, Keeps on Ticking
- Microsoft to Data-Mine Facebook & Twitter
- Amazon RDS vs. SQL Azure
- Azure Gets its First Commercial ERP App
- Qt DevDays 2009 - Munich
- Installing Geneva Beta 2 on Windows 7
- Binary Serialization and Azure Web Applications
- Yahoo! to Present at 4th International Cloud Computing Expo
- Microsoft’s First Step Toward Cloud Computing
- Social Media on Ulitzer - Strategy Nets New AUM for RIA
- EC Wrong, Wrong, Wrong – and Sloppy to Boot: Intel
- Adobe Flex Developer Earns $100K in New York City
- This Bing Thing Is Working
- Jill T. Singer of CIA to Present at Cloud Computing Expo on November 2
- Visual Studio 2010 Is Cloud Friendly
- SplendidCRM for Microsoft Windows Azure
- Azure on Ulitzer - Microsoft’s Cloud Builder Floats to Cisco: Report
- Governmental Cloud Interoperability on The Microsoft Cloud
- Microsoft Falls Off Cliff, Keeps on Ticking
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- Accessing the ASP.NET Authentication, Profile and Role Service in Silverlight
- Silverlight 2 - Adobe Flex Killer Is on Its Way!
- Building Great AJAX Applications Using ASP.NET
- Spice Up User Experience with Silverlight
- Is the Silverlight Adoption Rate Artificially Inflated?
- Kaazing Announces Support for Silverlight
- Will Google's Android Sink or Swim?
- VS 2008 Builds AJAX-based Web Apps
- Rich Content Rotator for ASP.NET
- Getting Started with Silverlight: Zero to Hero

































