<<Flex and Ajax can not only co-exist in rich Internet applications
(RIAs), they complement each other when used in a service-oriented
architecture (SOA)>>

- there is an opinion that Flex and Ajax facilitate fine-grain information 
exchange while SOA services are expected to be coarse-grained (though it is not 
a mandatory requirement). Do we have a conflict here?

- Michael



----- Original Message ----
From: Gervas Douglas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2008 5:11:20 PM
Subject: [service-orientated-architecture] Seeley on Flex, Ajax and SOA


<<Flex and Ajax can not only co-exist in rich Internet applications
(RIAs), they complement each other when used in a service-oriented
architecture (SOA).

At least so says James Ward, Flex evangelist for Adobe Systems Inc. He
will be delivering that message in a talk on RIA development, which he
is scheduled to give at the Linux World Conference and Expo in San
Francisco, Aug. 4 through 7.

"I've done my share of Ajax programming as well as Flex and both
models have their strengths and weaknesses," he said, previewing his
talk in an interview with SearchSOA.com.

Jason Bloomberg, senior analyst with ZapThink LLC., agreed with Ward
that Ajax and Flex play well together. "Each technology brings
something different to the table," the analyst said. "Flex brings the
power of Flash, for example, while AJAX enables HTML and
JavaScript-based capabilities in the RIA environment. These
technologies are far more complementary than competitive. "

>From that vantage point Ward sees the strength of Ajax and HTML in
content centric applications.

"If the user's primary goal is to read something," he said, "HTML is a
great technology for doing that. Ajax can add some interactivity and
provide better ways for the user to interact with that information. "

Flex can show off its muscles when the RIA application requires
interaction with databases and backend applications.

"On the other side of the spectrum when you have interactive
applications that are not just interactive in the user interface, but
also very interactive in talking to backend technology, your
databases," Ward said. "In that side of the spectrum, Flex is very
strong because it has a real virtual machine for executing code,
rather than just rendering HTML."

Where RIAs need to both render content and interact with backend
systems, the combination of Ajax and Flex is the best choice for
enterprise development teams, he said.

"If you're somewhere in the middle, which a lot of people are, what we
usually recommend is that you combine Flex and Ajax together," Ward
said. "We've seen a lot of people have great success doing that."

He points to Google Finance as an example of an application where Flex
and Ajax are working together.

"On Google Finance there's a very large interactive chart that's
obviously Flash," Ward said of the player that produces Flex
applications. "Then there's Ajax content and they both exist on the
page at the same time, and can even act together using something we
call the Flex-Ajax Bridge."

Developed first at Macromedia before it was acquired by Adobe and now
an Adobe Labs product, the Flex-Ajax Bridge is a code library for
integrating Flex applications with HTML content.

"There are quite a few people who need the strengths of both
technologies and use the Flex-Ajax Bridge to combine them," Ward said.

Development managers looking to combine the two technologies will need
to assemble a team with Ajax specialists and Flex specialists because
it is rare for a RIA developer to master both, the Flex evangelist said.

"They have some similarities in the technologies and programming
models," he said of Ajax and Flex. "But when you get down into the
details, if you want to be a real expert, you have to pretty much
specialize in one or the other. They both have so much depth to them
you'd have to be pretty extraordinary to be an expert in both."

While Ajax and Flex are both designed for programming user interfaces
and are based on JavaScript, the nitty-gritty of working with APIs for
the implementation are different and require unique skillsets, Ward
said.>>

You can read this at:

http://searchsoa. techtarget. com/news/ article/0, 289142,sid26_ gci1322367, 
00.html?track= NL-110&ad= 651146&asrc= EM_NLN_4095376& uid=5532089

Gervas

    


      

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