Flex

All Hail Blaze DS

Adobe just released a free and open-source Java implementation of flash/flex remoting service called Blaze DS for Java.

This is pretty huge for people, as it supports remoting to the new AMF version (3) which just got documentation released, but it also supports remoting and polling over port 80 — so no more getting blocked out behind firewall constraints (a common theme today?). And, did I mention — it’s FREE?

So this will allow Flash and Flex developers to do realtime data manipulation with databases through this Java service — and you don’t have to run ColdFusion (or AMFPHP) to do it. I love remoting. I’ve loved it since I first played with it and Flash MX (6).

The impact of this and developing media-rich (or just plain pretty) performance support tools is a very positive one, especially for enterprise IT departments that may not know anything about PHP but will support Java.

Flash
Flex
Tools

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“Flex”ing Development Muscles…

So, I bet you thought I was going dark again since it’s been almost a month without a post.

Actually, there’s been some moderate activity on the Flash For Learning grouplist. Not a ton of activity, but while there are many Flash developers and designers doing E-Learning, there’s probably not too many who are vocal. In the first month since the list was launched, we’ve got about 25 subscribers and maybe six people who post so far. Everyone’s in the same boat, realizing that there isn’t much out in the wild web on gearing Flash and related products for E-Learning. One of the members of the group is working on a full-on ActionScript class to handle the API communicaiton with SCORM. I’ve been hard at work doing something pressing that I’ll open up when I have it working.

Remember a few months back when I wrote about QA? I got a QA entry linking to a database working right out of Articulate Presenter as a tool in the upper right-hand corner. Honestly, it’s just a link to a URL, so it could be linked to anything, but the point is I have it working out of Articulate, using the LMS to provide your name when you enter a bug and Articulate to auto-fill the slide number you’re on, so all you have to do is tag what the problem is with keywords and then write a detailed description of the problem, and submit. The last week or two, I’ve been working on the management system to handle all that QA data, and I’m using it as an excuse to learn Flex 2 and AMFPHP 2.0 (currently in 1.9 beta 2). It’s fast, it’s effective, it’s efficient, it’s clean and neat — I’m surprised at how easy the combination of Flex 2 and AMFPHP 2 are to develop with. If I had tools like these when I was knocking out my first e-learning apps in 2001… well probably nothing would be different, but it sure would’ve been easier.

I’m currently gathering requirements to produce a learning game for my company. I won’t be developing it myself as the scope is just way too large for one guy to tackle. Right now we’re buying some serious games and we’re going to play and evaluate them at the same time we build the momentum from the businesses that will be served by this learning game for championing the project and get stakeholders identified and on-board. If anyone has experiences they’d like to share on the learning gaming front, I’d love to talk to you, as it’s completely foreign to me which makes it interesting to sell the idea of it to more conservative corporate types.

So this post isn’t really saying much except I’m alive, I’m active and communicating and there’s some pretty cool stuff going on that I’ll post here and on the Flash for Learning group.

Articulate
Bugtracking
Development
Flex
Productivity
QA

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SmartFlix

Today’s announcement about the release of Adobe’s CS3 suite of tools, including a new IDE for Flash, got me highly motivated to divde into my Safari Rough Cut of Colin Moock’s ActionScript 3 book, as well as pick up where I meandered off in my Flex 2: Training from the Source book.

And then I thought to myself, “Wow, do these books take a while to get through.” That’s when my buddy Santi IM’d me about renting training videos from SmartFlix. SmartFlix has instructional DVDs on all sorts of things — like metalworking, soldering and other geek wonderment. But I was very happy to find two different DVDs from TotalTraining on Adobe Flex 2.

I’ll have a week to go through them, but that should be enough to kick my but into gear. If you’re like me and you want to play, but lack the time or the motivation to read even when you surround yourself with good materials, give SmartFlix a shot.

I’m really looking forward to their arrival. And thanks for the tip, Santi.

Development
Flex
Training

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