I'm not going to try and sum up everything that was presented at the conference: I'm not sure any one person can. But there were a number of news items and developments that came about either just before the conference or during the conference that I thought were worth pointing out:
- ColdFusion 9 in the Cloud: In the opening CFUnited
keynote, Ben Forta and the Adobe team announced that ColdFusion 9 would
include licensing options for running ColdFusion in cloud environments,
and that they would specifically support the use of ColdFusion 9 on
Amazon's EC2 cloud environment. Details (sparse though they are) can
be found on Ben's blog post on the subject. Though I'm not a fan boy of cloud computing, having this option is
important for ColdFusion developers who have an idea for a high-traffic
web application but don't have the money to invest in their own server
farm.
- 4CFF: 4CFF is the acronym for the For
ColdFusion Foundation, a new non-profit foundations founded by several
member of the CF community with the goal of providing assistance and
resources to ColdFusion open-source projects and establishing a
"professional membership society for the ColdFusion Community at
large." I missed their unofficial announcement/presentation, so I
can't provide any information about how they plan to move forward with
their goals, but I think the idea of having a resource where CF
programmers can get help with the non-programming challenges involved
in starting and maintaining an open-source project is a good one.
- Framework
updates/changes: The final, production version of Model-Glue 3.0
(Gesture) was released just prior to the
conference, while the beta release of ColdBox 3.0
was announced on the first day of the conference. But perhaps the most
dramatic framework announcement was that Adam Haskell, previously the lead developer for the
Fusebox framework, was going to resign from that role and lead the
development of a new and separate version of Fusebox called FuseNG
(Fusebox Next Generation), citing
irreconcilable difference between himself and TeraTech, the Maryland-based CF development/training
shop that currently controls the domain name and source code behind
Fusebox. As a developer who uses Fusebox, I'm curious to see how this
decision will play out. The current version of Fusebox is a very
effective, usable, and mature framework, but Adam's a smart guy and
it'll be interesting to see what he and the other developers involved
in FuseNG will come
up with.
- The Merlin Manager beta: The final event on Friday at the conference was the Demo Derby, where developers got several minutes to show off a project of theirs. While all of the presentations were noteworthy (and in two instances quite humorous), the one I thought really needed to be brought to the attention of the CF community as a whole was John Mason's Merlin Manager. One of the announcements regarding ColdFusion 9 was that it would provide an AIR-powered desktop application that would let ColdFusion server administrators manage and compare multiple ColdFusion server instances from one dashboard. John's Merlin Manager is also an AIR-powered CF server manager, but it's built to work with ColdFusion 7 and 8 servers. He demonstrated how his app provided real-time status information for a server, how it let you store current server settings as a snapshot prior to making a settings change, and that it could compare the settings between two different servers, highlighting where the settings differed. Even though the project is still in beta, it looked very feature-complete and could be of real benefit to those CF shops that won't be upgrading to CF 9 anytime soon. John is looking for volunteers to participate in evaluating the beta: if you're interested, visit http://www.merlinmanager.com/ to sign up.
For those folks who weren't able to attend, be aware that a number of the presenters will be posting their presentations online, either on their own blogs, SlideSix, or both, so keep an eye out for announcements about those (and note that some of those posting and announcements were made last week during the conference itself).
No comments:
Post a Comment