01/22/2016

IBM Connect 2016 - I'm going

Category IBM Connect Orlando XPages Development
I will be there. Will you?
IBM Connect 2016

07/16/2015

MWLUG 2015: Great Content, Less Fluff

Category Notes Domino XPages Development Admin

crosspost from LearningXPages

Just to be clear and so there is NO CONFUSION, MWLUG 2015 at the Ritz-Carlton in Downtown Atlanta, GA next month (August 19-21) is all about content and value and crap we YellowBleeders care about.

It is NOT and IBM Marketing event. It is a TECHNICAL EVENT.

IBM is a huge sponsor, but so is redpill development, and so are BCC, DOCOVA, HADSL, Panagenda, PSC Group, Riva, teamstudio, Ytria, along with all the other MWLUG 2015 Sponsors.

Without these sponsors, awesome geek-focused conferences such as MWLUG simply could not exist. The costs putting together a decent conference at a good venue are phenomenonally high, and if the sponsors were not there with their money then the conference fee would be prohibitively expensive (take the cost of the last Lotusphere you attended and triple it).

MWLUG is a technical content focused conference, CREATED BY YellowBleeders FOR YellowBleeders. Quit your bitching, fork over your measly $50, and join me in Atlanta this August. I'll see you there.

02/23/2015

Crosspost from Learning XPages: Presenting at Das EntwicklerCamp 2015

Category XPages Conference Sessions

08/14/2012

Learning XPages: Extending Tommy Valand’s clearMap

QuickImage Category XPages SSJS scope Map keySet() Iterator scoped variables RegExp

I have posted a utility SSJS funcion at Learning XPages wherein I extend Tommy Valand's clearMap function.
Enjoy.

-Devin

08/13/2012

Learning XPages: A little bit of scope...

QuickImage Category XPages Scope Lotus Technical Serialization

I have publised a new blogpost on Learning XPages. It is A little bit of scope will never. Never, ever, ever erase, and is my attempt to explain some scope and serialization issues.

Enjoy.

-Devin

08/10/2012

I'm Henry VIII

QuickImage Category Announcements Lotus XPages

One more time, with feeling.

The new blog is up, and accessible. DNS should have propagated by now, and most importantly I have the network cables plugged into the correct devices. DOH!

My first post is:
Episode IV - A New Hope

The Blog itself is called:
Learning XPages

Enjoy.

-Devin

08/10/2012

Curses! Foiled again!

QuickImage Category Bitching Technical Announcements Lotus XPages

Well yesterday's announcement has turned out to be a bit of a flop. It seems that my new blog site is not yet accessible.

"We are aware of the issue and hope to have it resolved promptly."

Sigh. I'll post again once it is online. Thanks for your patience.

-Devin

08/09/2012

Learning XPages: NEW BLOG

QuickImage Category XPages Announcements

I'm starting a new blog specifically aimed at learning XPages. If you are interested, my first post is
Episode IV - A New Hope

The Blog itself is called
Learning XPages

Enjoy.

-Devin

12/21/2011

Why XPINC sucks

QuickImage Category Bitching Technical Lotus XPages

Wherein I explain what IBM needs to do to make XPINC live up to it's potential

Read this before you go any further. I'll wait.....

Now allow me to make one thing perfectly clear:

thick clients are not going away.

There has been a whole lot of fuss over the last 18 months about "social", "cloud" and "web based" solutions. XPages technology (which is extremely powerful and cool) seems to have been caught up with a lot of this hyperbole, which is a shame because it generates an unhelpful association with these other things.

XPages are web based -but only because CSS, JavaScript, HTML, and other required client delivery and presentation technologies are bundled and integrated into web browsers. The server is like a honey badger; very badass and doesn't care about the client. It processes GET, PUT, and POST requests -nothing more. I'm not trying to minimize the awesome power of XPages here, the processing stuff that goes on and the things you can do are absolutely incredible. But with regard to communication with the client it is an HTTP processing server -period.

Getting back to my point about thick clients, they are going to be around for a long time. The primary reason for this is the same reason they evolved in the first place -local data access. The pro thin client, pro cloud marketing crowd just don't seem to grasp that "always connected" is a myth. There are a bunch of other ancillary reasons for the thick client to stay around (security, encryption, processing speed, etc), but the most important one is local data access.

When the wire breaks or the cloud goes away, people still need to get things done.

Which brings us to XPINC. A critically important business need for running XPages in the Notes Client seems to have been forgotten: getting work done -even when disconnected. Accessing an XPages application on a Domino server somewhere from your Notes Client is fine and dandy, but what about when you don't have access to the server? The Notes Client has it's own internal XPages server (a GREAT start BTW); but until the Notes Client / Local XPages server combination is fully capable it is really nothing more than a fun playground.

In Sean's blog post (you did read it, right?) he talks about the troubles with opening an XPage from another database. The real crux of the problem isn't so much how you get the data as it is accessing the database itself. There is the rub. We need to be able to define RULES for accessing other databases -how to find it, where to find it, and under what conditions should we even look for it.

Dynamic determination of remote data sources is the single greatest XPINC miss

Until we we can programmatically determine at run-time what data sources to use, and where to find them XPINC will languish in the realm of "could-have-been" computer stuff -a world occupied by the likes of the NeXT computer, OS/2, and Second Life.

I'm not trying to belittle the work done so far. XPINC really has come a long way and is getting better with each release -but it is not good enough yet. I want to encourage IBM to keep pushing, keep making this better; because I really want to use XPINC. My backlog of potential projects waiting for a fully functional, fully featured XPINC implementation is huge. It is large enough to keep me billable for many, many years. But until such an implementation is delivered this backlog will remain nothing more than "potential".

Potential doesn't pay the bills.

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