Monday, June 28, 2010

AJAX: a new approach to web development

If anything about current interaction design can be called “glamorous,” it’s creating Web applications. After all, when was the last time you heard someone rave about the interaction design of a product that wasn’t on the Web? (Okay, besides the iPod.) All the cool, innovative new projects are online.

Despite this, Web interaction designers can’t help but feel a little envious of our colleagues who create desktop software. Desktop applications have a richness and responsiveness that has seemed out of reach on the Web. The same simplicity that enabled the Web’s rapid proliferation also creates a gap between the experiences we can provide and the experiences users can get from a desktop application.

That gap is closing. Take a look at Google Suggest. Watch the way the suggested terms update as you type, almost instantly. Now look at Google Maps. Zoom in. Use your cursor to grab the map and scroll around a bit. Again, everything happens almost instantly, with no waiting for pages to reload.

Google Suggest and Google Maps are two examples of a new approach to web applications that we at Adaptive Path have been calling Ajax. The name is shorthand for Asynchronous JavaScript + XML, and it represents a fundamental shift in what’s possible on the Web.

DEFINING AJAX

Ajax isn’t a technology. It’s really several technologies, each flourishing in its own right, coming together in powerful new ways. Ajax incorporates:

The classic web application model works like this: Most user actions in the interface trigger an HTTP request back to a web server. The server does some processing — retrieving data, crunching numbers, talking to various legacy systems — and then returns an HTML page to the client. It’s a model adapted from the Web’s original use as a hypertext medium, but as fans of The Elements of User Experienceknow, what makes the Web good for hypertext doesn’t necessarily make it good for software applications.

Ajax Overview 1

Figure 1: The traditional model for web applications (left) compared to the Ajax model (right).

This approach makes a lot of technical sense, but it doesn’t make for a great user experience. While the server is doing its thing, what’s the user doing? That’s right, waiting. And at every step in a task, the user waits some more.

Obviously, if we were designing the Web from scratch for applications, we wouldn’t make users wait around. Once an interface is loaded, why should the user interaction come to a halt every time the application needs something from the server? In fact, why should the user see the application go to the server at all?

HOW AJAX IS DIFFERENT

An Ajax application eliminates the start-stop-start-stop nature of interaction on the Web by introducing an intermediary — an Ajax engine — between the user and the server. It seems like adding a layer to the application would make it less responsive, but the opposite is true.

Instead of loading a webpage, at the start of the session, the browser loads an Ajax engine — written in JavaScript and usually tucked away in a hidden frame. This engine is responsible for both rendering the interface the user sees and communicating with the server on the user’s behalf. The Ajax engine allows the user’s interaction with the application to happen asynchronously — independent of communication with the server. So the user is never staring at a blank browser window and an hourglass icon, waiting around for the server to do something.

Ajax Overview 2

Figure 2: The synchronous interaction pattern of a traditional web application (top) compared with the asynchronous pattern of an Ajax application (bottom).

Every user action that normally would generate an HTTP request takes the form of a JavaScript call to the Ajax engine instead. Any response to a user action that doesn’t require a trip back to the server — such as simple data validation, editing data in memory, and even some navigation — the engine handles on its own. If the engine needs something from the server in order to respond — if it’s submitting data for processing, loading additional interface code, or retrieving new data — the engine makes those requests asynchronously, usually using XML, without stalling a user’s interaction with the application.

WHO’S USING AJAX

Google is making a huge investment in developing the Ajax approach. All of the major products Google has introduced over the last year — Orkut, Gmail, the latest beta version of Google Groups,Google Suggest, and Google Maps — are Ajax applications. (For more on the technical nuts and bolts of these Ajax implementations, check out these excellent analyses of Gmail, Google Suggest, and Google Maps.) Others are following suit: many of the features that people love in Flickr depend on Ajax, and Amazon’s A9.com search engine applies similar techniques.

These projects demonstrate that Ajax is not only technically sound, but also practical for real-world applications. This isn’t another technology that only works in a laboratory. And Ajax applications can be any size, from the very simple, single-function Google Suggest to the very complex and sophisticated Google Maps.

At Adaptive Path, we’ve been doing our own work with Ajax over the last several months, and we’re realizing we’ve only scratched the surface of the rich interaction and responsiveness that Ajax applications can provide. Ajax is an important development for Web applications, and its importance is only going to grow. And because there are so many developers out there who already know how to use these technologies, we expect to see many more organizations following Google’s lead in reaping the competitive advantage Ajax provides.

MOVING FORWARD

The biggest challenges in creating Ajax applications are not technical. The core Ajax technologies are mature, stable, and well understood. Instead, the challenges are for the designers of these applications: to forget what we think we know about the limitations of the Web, and begin to imagine a wider, richer range of possibilities.

It’s going to be fun.


AJAX Q&A


Q. Did Adaptive Path invent Ajax? Did Google? Did Adaptive Path help build Google’s Ajax applications?

A. Neither Adaptive Path nor Google invented Ajax. Google’s recent products are simply the highest-profile examples of Ajax applications. Adaptive Path was not involved in the development of Google’s Ajax applications, but we have been doing Ajax work for some of our other clients.

Q. Is Adaptive Path selling Ajax components or trademarking the name? Where can I download it?

A. Ajax isn’t something you can download. It’s an approach — a way of thinking about the architecture of web applications using certain technologies. Neither the Ajax name nor the approach are proprietary to Adaptive Path.

Q. Is Ajax just another name for XMLHttpRequest?

A. No. XMLHttpRequest is only part of the Ajax equation. XMLHttpRequest is the technical component that makes the asynchronous server communication possible; Ajax is our name for the overall approach described in the article, which relies not only on XMLHttpRequest, but on CSS, DOM, and other technologies.

Q. Why did you feel the need to give this a name?

A. I needed something shorter than “Asynchronous JavaScript+CSS+DOM+XMLHttpRequest” to use when discussing this approach with clients.

Q. Techniques for asynchronous server communication have been around for years. What makes Ajax a “new” approach?

A. What’s new is the prominent use of these techniques in real-world applications to change the fundamental interaction model of the Web. Ajax is taking hold now because these technologies and the industry’s understanding of how to deploy them most effectively have taken time to develop.

Q. Is Ajax a technology platform or is it an architectural style?

A. It’s both. Ajax is a set of technologies being used together in a particular way.

Q. What kinds of applications is Ajax best suited for?

A. We don’t know yet. Because this is a relatively new approach, our understanding of where Ajax can best be applied is still in its infancy. Sometimes the traditional web application model is the most appropriate solution to a problem.

Q. Does this mean Adaptive Path is anti-Flash?

A. Not at all. Macromedia is an Adaptive Path client, and we’ve long been supporters of Flash technology. As Ajax matures, we expect that sometimes Ajax will be the better solution to a particular problem, and sometimes Flash will be the better solution. We’re also interested in exploring ways the technologies can be mixed (as in the case of Flickr, which uses both).

Q. Does Ajax have significant accessibility or browser compatibility limitations? Do Ajax applications break the back button? Is Ajax compatible with REST? Are there security considerations with Ajax development? Can Ajax applications be made to work for users who have JavaScript turned off?

A. The answer to all of these questions is “maybe”. Many developers are already working on ways to address these concerns. We think there’s more work to be done to determine all the limitations of Ajax, and we expect the Ajax development community to uncover more issues like these along the way.

Q. Some of the Google examples you cite don’t use XML at all. Do I have to use XML and/or XSLT in an Ajax application?

A. No. XML is the most fully-developed means of getting data in and out of an Ajax client, but there’s no reason you couldn’t accomplish the same effects using a technology like JavaScript Object Notationor any similar means of structuring data for interchange.

Q. Are Ajax applications easier to develop than traditional web applications?

A. Not necessarily. Ajax applications inevitably involve running complex JavaScript code on the client. Making that complex code efficient and bug-free is not a task to be taken lightly, and better development tools and frameworks will be needed to help us meet that challenge.

Q. Do Ajax applications always deliver a better experience than traditional web applications?

A. Not necessarily. Ajax gives interaction designers more flexibility. However, the more power we have, the more caution we must use in exercising it. We must be careful to use Ajax to enhance the user experience of our applications, not degrade it.

Jesse James Garrett is the Director of User Experience Strategy and a founder of Adaptive Path. He is the author of the widely-referenced book The Elements of User Experience. Jesse’s other essays includeThe Nine Pillars of Successful Web Teams and Six Design Lessons From the Apple Store.



Form:
http://www.adaptivepath.com/publications/essays/archives/000385.php

Sunday, June 27, 2010

How to post to twitter using Command line in windows

Well i found this post interesting :-)

By now, just about everyone knows about the Twitter Command Line Client for Linux. Ever since I started using it, I fell in love and I’ve been looking for something similar for Windows. Well, I’ve finally found it: The Twitter CLI is a simple tool that lets you post updates toTwitter from the Windows Command Line or, my favorite, the Run dialog.

Download

The small file is located at Phalacee.com (local mirror).

Installation

  1. Extract the contents of the Twitter CLI.zip file into your Windows folder, which is located at:
    C:\Windows
  2. Open the Twitter.bat file in Notepad (right-click, then choose Edit) and enter your Twitter user name and password in the appropriate fields:
    set username=YourTwitterUserName
    set password=YourTwitterPassword
  3. Save the file and close Notepad.

Update Twitter Via Command Line

Now you are able to Tweet via your Windows Command Line:

  1. Hit the Windows Key+R
  2. Type in the following:
    twitter ""
    Enter your status between the quotes.
  3. Hit OK or the Enter on your keyboard.

That’s all there is to it! If you want your update to read: I’m eating over my keyboard and making a mess! You would enter:
twitter "I'm eating over my keyboard and making a mess!"

Notes

  • The message must be less than 140 characters, which is Twitter’s limit.
  • It’s not necessary to use quotation marks in your update but will be needed if you’re inputting a URL in your message:
    twitter "I just added a great picture to Flickr http://tinyurl.com/6r95ur"

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Get Started with the GWT SDK



This is about the getting started with GWT SDK and setting up the working environment for eclipse and command line tool.(It is for windows)

What are the things you need to get started with GWT.
1. You will need the Java SDK version 1.5 or later. If necessary, download and install the Java SE Development Kit (JDK) for your platform.
2. Apache Ant is also necessary to run command line arguments. If you don't already have it, install Apache Ant.

From here after i am assuming that you have downloaded and installed JDK and also you have downloaded Apache ant.

Steps
1. Extract Apache ant to C drive.
2. Rename it as "ant".
3. Set ANT_HOME environment variable
To set it follow the steps
My Computer -> Advanced System Properties -> Environment Variable.
Now on the system variable click on New to add a new Environment Variable.
variable_name="ANT_HOME"
value="C:\ant"

4. Update Path environment variable. e.g.(oldpath;%ANT_HOME%/bin;)
To update it in the environment variable window click on path and put ";" at the end of all the path and then put "%ANT_HOME%/bin" at the end.
Now test ant is installed.

How to set install GWT SDK?

Download and unzip the Google Web Toolkit SDK. This contains the core libraries, compiler, and development server that you need to write web applications.
On Windows, extract the files from the compressed folder gwt-2.0.3.zip
The GWT SDK doesn't have an installer application. All the files you need to run and use the SDK are located in the extracted directory.

How to set up Eclipse IDE?
If you do not already have Eclipse, you may download it from the Eclipse Website.I suggest downloading Eclipse 3.5 (Galileo).

The Google Plugin for Eclipse 3.5 is installed using the following update site. If you are using an earlier version of Eclipse, replace the 3.5 version number with your version (3.3 or 3.4). For detailed instructions on installing plugins in Eclipse, see instructions for Eclipse 3.5, Eclipse 3.4, or Eclipse 3.3.

http://dl.google.com/eclipse/plugin/3.5

In the Install dialog, you will see an option to install the Plugin as well as the GWT and App Engine SDKs. Choosing the SDK options will install a GWT and/or App Engine SDK within your Eclipse plugin directory as a convinience.

Now GWT SDK is installed in your eclipse.

Now you can Write GWT applications.


Sunday, June 20, 2010

Google Web Toolkit(GWT)

What is Google web toolkit? Why it is use full to web-developer? What can be done with it?
How it helps the web-developer?

Well this were some question which were there in my mind in last few hours.

Google web toolkit is set of toolkit that is used for building and optimizing complex browsers based applications.

One may ask what is complex browser application?

For me complex applications are writing ajax request like XMLHttpRequest and JavaScript.

It is an open source set of tools that allows web-developer to create and maintain front-end web application in Java.It is licensed under apache license v2.

So how does it works?
Using GWT developer can rapidly develop ajax application in Java using any Java development tool. When the application is developed the GWT cross compiler translate the Java application to stand alone JavaScript file. So whatever is our ajax or JavaScript requirement in our web application we write that application in Java and then we change that to JavaScript file and include that file in our web document. This way it saves a lot of time of developers to write complex JavaScript.

Some other interesting stuff about GWT
1. The GWT SDK provides a core set of Java API's and library that allows developers to build user interface and logic for the browser client . Than it is cross compiled to JavaScript and at the end we have plain JavaScript.
2. GWT can handle all the client -server communication. so we don't need to worry about XMLHttpRequest it is handled by GWT.
3. The handwritten JavaScript can be mixed with Java Source code to interface with existing JavaScript API's .

Some of the projects which uses GWT are Google Wave and AdWords.

I hope this will help to those who are just browsing the net to find out basic idea about GWT.









Friday, June 18, 2010

Making a dynamic web page

I was just wondering from last few days how to make my webpage more user friendly
user friendly i mean if a user wants to register to my web site why i will redirect him to a new page rather i will make the form appear there it self.
this i can do using jquery and ajax.

i will be coming with the ways how to do it in few days keep checking. :-)