Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

Feb 01 2008

OpenAjax needs to change

Published by Ric under Uncategorized

I can not fully express my frustration with the progress of the OpenAjax Alliance.

I transfered the OpenDomain OpenAjax.Org to the Alliance back in 2006. I have asked Jon Ferraiolo to add link to OpenDomain.Org and I have received NO communication on the progress of this simple task. When we gave the domain ecmascript.org to Brendan Eich, he added a link within a day. The longest time anyone took was one month when we donated xmpp.org to Jabber eight years ago.

Let me explain about OpenDomain: we are not for profit. We do not have advertisements. We are not interested in link spam. I like to think of it as Open Source for Domains: I work hard to buy domains from squatters so I can contribute to the Open Web. Check the archives: We have never sold a domain, published spam, played dumb SEO tricks, or anything. And yet even when I spent tens of thousands of dollars to acquire domains for Open groups, I do not get even a thank-you.

After a scouring the OpenAjax wiki, I finally found that the new web site proposal may have a link to OpenDomain. For that, I am grateful . However, that still does not explain why it has taken so long and especially why no one has ever communicated with me.

However, the link to OpenDomain is a small thing (except to me, of course.) Want to know what the REAL problem is? No one CARES. For a concrete example, Go to the best job search site on the web and look for OpenAjax: http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=openajax - not ONE job labeled ‘OpenAjax’. Does ANYONE on the Alliance marketing committee understand branding? A cute little logo and some fake press releases just are not cutting it. When I went to the Ajax Experience, most developers I talked to did not even KNOW what ‘OpenAjax’ was.

I am NOT saying that Jon has done a bad job. I can see that he has worked hard to facilitate agreements between significant delegates with opposing needs. I also appreciate the time from all members to further the art of Ajax. The problem is that it is not really open to developers and is too SLOW. Ajax is supposed to be the ‘hot’ technology and we are still trying to agree on the hub? Look at what happened with the W3C: vendors became frustrated with time to market and developed their own separate solutions and now all web developers suffer to target multiple implementations.

I am calling for a CHANGE of the OpenAjax Alliance: You MUST improve your communications to non-members. You MUST follow through with your commitments. You MUST form a real organization with targeted goals. You MUST ask the member companies to donate the resources of some full time developers.

I recently received a sizable offer to sell OpenAjax.Com, but I was afraid the buyer would use it to display p0rn. I am willing to donate for FREE the use of to create a portal for developers, to promote the use of OpenAjax.

Is ANYONE interested?

No responses yet

Oct 29 2007

God Bless Scoble

Published by Ric under Uncategorized

One of my favorite bloggers is Robert Scoble . Not just because he is smart, popular, and handsome. (Well 2 out of three aint bad) Because he tells it like it is. And he does it well.

I was at a Web 2.0 conference this week, and my intention was to blog on it every day to help generate a community, but I had to wait until now. How in the HELL does he charm all the dirt on new tech and still have energy to blog? I recently had a very bad experience with U.S. Airways, but I would be afraid to hear some of the horror stories Scoble could dredge up.

Here is what I learned at the Ajax Experience : There is a jihad going on in the web development community and we are ALL going to loose.

  1. There was a browser war. Microsoft won
  2. We are in the middle of another
  3. The Javascript language is being used as the foremost weapon
  4. Adding ANY new feature to the web can be argued it has a chance to cause harm
  5. Time benefits entrenched companies to keep the status quo and not change

Here are the players

  • Microsoft: I can not find ANYTHING on what is really going on. NO ONE at the conference trusted them. If they want developers, developers, developers then they should be more transparent. Will XAML interfere with Open Ajax?
  • Yahoo: I tended to believe Douglas Crockford that the new Javascript language is akin to ‘the ghost of Netscape’ and may be bloated. However, adding CLASSES to JavaScript is NOT a bad thing and computer scientists should not be afraid to add new features. I am am also cynical that Yahoo may still be promoting IE.
  • Mozilla: How exactly did the current Ecmascript 4 proposal get through the committee ?
  • Adobe: A breath of fresh AIR, but what is the partnership with Mozilla? I think it is great that such a mature scripting engine was donated, but wonder the business objective.
  • AOL: Thanks for supporting the conference and especially Dojo! Where can we find information on the agreement?
  • Sun: jMaki is kewl. What exactly is JavaFx in the new web?
  • Apple: Um… where were you? For that matter, where were reps for Facebook and MySpace?
  • Framework vendors: Why exactly is your framework better than the other TWO HUNDRED Ajax vendors out there? Please be specific because you are asking me to spend my time and money on your proprietary system and there are many Open Source solutions out there.
  • Google: They claimed to want more developers, but they were not very approachable. Dion was nice however, although hard to talk to just because he was so busy!
  • IBM: Jon Ferraiolo has done a GREAT job with Open Ajax, but I do wish he could understand there is more than the corporate way to contribute.

There are A LOT of accusations of backroom deals being made. Can anyone make a clear statement addressing this? The first company to get the trust of the developers will win, and I intend to do everything I can to support true OpenAjax.

17 responses so far

Oct 24 2007

Ajax Experience needed

Published by Ric under Uncategorized

I am here at the Ajax Experience to find some developers to help me with the vision of what OpenAjax.Com can become.

It is interesting to see the mix of people here compared to other conferences.  There are different vendors, and a mux of knurds.  It is nice to see  more of the gentler gender here - IT is generally a male dominated sport:  A silicon ceiling if you will.  I would love to see that change - maybe when Hilary becomes president.

Is it too geeky to take pictures?  I LOVE the web and I want just jump over to the Google booth and ask if I can get a group photo (and Microsoft, and IBM, and ….) - I am about OPEN Ajax after all!

I will try to post during the day on my Experience.

No responses yet

Sep 25 2007

Welcome to OpenAjax.com

Published by Ric under Uncategorized

Welcome to OpenAjax.Com

We are just setting up - please be patient

Hello to Charlie and Alex!

No responses yet