Application Development Trends' News


Monday morning thoughts

A few notes of possible interest to application developers.

HP extends 'Adaptive Enterprise' with TruLogica buy

Hewlett-Packard (HP) Co. last week signed a definitive agreement to buy TruLogica, a Dallas-based provider of identity management software. HP plans to integrate the privately owned company's ID management technology into its OpenView Select Access software to form "a complete federated identity management offering."

Telelogic adds C++, Java support

Telelogic, expanding quickly beyond its embedded systems roots, plans to add C++ and Java support to tools for modeling, requirements and development, according to Per Blysa, vice president of product management for the company's Tau developer tools.

The Danger of Betting on the Future

A small reflection on the slipping ship dates of Visual Studio .NET "Whidbey" and SQL Server "Yukon".

To catch a thief with BizTalk Server 2004

Watching the detectives may be fun on TV, but human detection is "not very productive" when it comes to stopping retail theft, according to Steve Winningham, senior vice president of IT at Virgin Entertainment. He explained how his company uses technology to help catch employees stealing from the 23 Virgin Megastores in the U.S.

WS-I issues new security guidelines

The Web Services Interoperability (WS-I) Organization has lent a hand to Web services architects and developers looking for security solutions with the release of a new report that identifies potential threats and outlines countermeasures based on common scenarios.

Nexaweb pursues rich interfaces

The latest release of the Nexaweb Platform, due this week from Cambridge, Mass.-based Nexaweb Technologies, comes with Nexaweb Studio, a visual RAD environment that is coupled with a full implementation of the Eclipse IDE.

Better programs through better interaction design

Programmers Report spoke recently with Dick Berry, an IBM distinguished engineer working on that holiest of Holy Grails: ease of use.

JavaServer Faces (JSF) spec wins approval

The Java Community Process is refreshingly low-key compared to much of the software industry, so it was probably not surprising that there was very little hoopla this past week when JavaServer Faces (JSF) specification 1.0 won approval from its members.

SAP backs Oracle in federal lawsuit

The civil antitrust lawsuit filed last week by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) in U.S. District Court in San Francisco to block Oracle Corp.'s $9.4 billion takeover bid for PeopleSoft drew responses from a number of quarters last week. Perhaps most surprising was the announcement by chief rival SAP that it agrees with Oracle.

Notes from the PocketPC Front

In which the intrepid reporter undertakes a few weeks of development using the .NET Compact Framework, and lives to tell of it.

Windows Rights Management Service: not ready for prime time

Windows 2003 and Office 2003 offer a seductively elegant way to handle digital rights management. But alas, the platform is just too open for this to be effective.

Change hits SCM -- Serena bids for Merant

Mainframe change management software expert Serena Software Inc. moved this week to buy longtime distributed software configuration software maker Merant.

IBM calls for open-source Java

IBM has called on Java creator Sun Microsystems to join an effort to turn its proprietary Java code over to the open-source community.

More focus on performance needed: Forrester

A recent Forrester Consulting study chartered by Compuware Corp., Farmington Hills, Mich., reveals that many IT organizations are still reactive rather than proactive in solving performance problems.

SAML, WS-Security on view at RSA

Eleven vendors teamed up with the U.S. General Service Administration (GSA) E-Gov E-Authentication Initiative to demonstrate the interoperability of the Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) at the recent RSA Conference 2004 in San Francisco.

At RSA: General pushes 'No tolerance' policy for security bugs

As far as retired U.S. Air Force General John Gordon is concerned, the blame for the sorry state of software security lies with developers.

The source code glut

There's more software available in source code form than ever before. Is this improving the development process any?

Sueltz leaves Sun for Salesforce.com

Patricia C. Sueltz this week resigned her post as EVP of the Sun Services Group at Sun Microsystems to join CRM software maker Salesforce.com as president of marketing, technology and systems.