Archive for October 25th, 2008

Church Of England Links Its World Development Campaigners On The Web

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

The Church of England’s national network of local campaigners on world development issues is being linked together more effectively on the worldwide web in a bid to amplify their voices on crucial global topics.

The new ‘Partners in World Development’ website provides parishes with up-to-date information on issues such as trade justice, debt relief and climate change.

It also provides profiles of many Church of England dioceses, with overviews of the projects they have underway and details of their link dioceses overseas. These also include contact details for each diocese’s World Development Adviser, or similar usually a volunteer who helps co-ordinate structured work to raise awareness of these subjects locally.

The site features a calendar of forthcoming local and national events, links to Anglican development agencies and other in-depth resources, including prayer prompts.

Many other British denominations are heavily involved in development campaigning, too, although many of them do not have the kind of resources available to the C of E. The Methodists and Catholics have been especially strong in pioneering justice and anti-poverty campaigns, among others.

The Rt Rev Tony Robinson, Bishop of Pontefract, is the Episcopal Adviser for the Church of England’s growing network of diocesan World Development Advisers.

“Exactly three months ago at the Lambeth Conference, the Anglican Communion showed what impact a public commitment to work together on pressing world issues can have, when the bishops and their spouses walked through London to urge international governments to keep their promises on the Millennium Development Goals. And exactly one month ago, this call was echoed at the UN summit in New York,” he said.

“This new site makes a vital contribution to the ongoing process of encouraging and resourcing such campaigning. It’s inspiring to see the contributions that parishes and dioceses are making to building a world in which people everywhere can have an opportunity to flourish.”

Design and development costs for the new website were met by the Archbishops’ Council’s Mission and Public Affairs Division.

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Yahoo’s Developer Platform To Launch Next Week

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Yahoo will launch its platform for Web developers next week, part of an effort to attract more visitors by adding Facebook-like social networking features to Yahoo’s Web sites.

Yahoo hopes to drive more traffic to its sites by allowing people to share information about their interests and activities with friends. Like on Facebook, they’ll be able to create a network of connections and send alerts to those people when they upload photos to Flickr or comment on a story at Yahoo News, for example.

The platform will extend to non-Yahoo sites such as Amazon and Digg, so that users will be able to see from within Yahoo’s Web sites what their friends have been doing elsewhere on the Web. And third-party sites will be able to publish user activity back into the Yahoo network, which could help those sites draw more visitors.

The search company is making the data it stores about users — such as their contacts, interests and location — available for developers to build their applications. End users will be able to regulate which of their information friends and developers can see, said Yahoo officials, who previewed the platform in San Francisco on Friday.

It’s an ambitious project that required Yahoo to “rewire” its properties to create a single underlying platform that connects them all. Those services existed in the past as “silos” that allowed for little interaction between them, said Ash Patel, executive vice president with Yahoo’s Audience Product Division.

“The platform is how we start rewiring and reforming the user experience,” he said.

Yahoo launched the first piece of the puzzle last week, a site called Yahoo Profiles where end users can manage their activities, interests and social connections in one place. Next week will mark the launch of the developer component. It’s built on top of Yahoo’s existing network infrastructure and consists broadly of three layers.

The first is the Yahoo Social Platform, a repository where Yahoo stores the personal data about its users, along with their “social graph,” or information about who their friends are. Above that is the Application Platform, which provides the development framework. And above that is the Yahoo Query Language, which developers will use to pull personal user data from Yahoo’s servers and write their programs. YQL is very similar to the widely used SQL database language, according to Yahoo.

The platform also makes use of public APIs such as Open Social, for aggregating user data from other social networking sites, and OAuth, a protocol for consuming and publishing personal data. The tools and documentation will be available for free download next week from the Yahoo Developer Network, said Jay Rossiter, head of Yahoo’s Open Strategy project. He wouldn’t say exactly which day.

Yahoo officials gave examples of the types of applications it wants developers to build. If a person receives an e-mail telling them it’s a friend’s birthday, an application could allow them to view their friend’s Amazon.com Wish List from within Yahoo Mail. Another program might automatically upload photos received via Yahoo Mail to an online photo account, be that Flickr or a non-Yahoo service such as Shutterfly.

Part of the challenge will be getting Yahoo’s users to buy into the idea. At some time in the future, when they log into a Yahoo service they’ll see the Yahoo Activator, which will present a list of all their contacts pulled from Yahoo Mail, Yahoo Messenger and other services. They’ll use this to build their connections list and decide who can see what information.

Activations can already be done at the new Yahoo Profiles site and with a beta of Yahoo Messenger 9 that was just released. Activations will be rolled out more widely in a few months when the option is presented to people when they log into their Yahoo Mail accounts, and at other Yahoo services after that.

Each new application will have to warn users about the data it plans to access, such as their address book, inbox or profile, and about who the information will be shared with. Patel admitted that this is a delicate area. Yahoo will make certain selections by default that users can then alter.

“Choosing the right defaults so people don’t inadvertently give away their privacy is part of the challenge,” Patel said.

The OAuth protocol allows users to give a site access to their data for a limited time, such as two weeks, said Neal Sample, a Yahoo chief architect.

Yahoo doesn’t expect the Profiles page to become a major destination. Instead, users will eventually be able to install applications and display updates at their My Yahoo page, in Yahoo Mail, and possibly at Yahoo’s main home page.

Yahoo, which has been struggling to sustain its growth rate, hopes the social networking features will encourage people to use more of its services. If the average user visits two or three of its sites today, it hopes that seeing what friends are doing elsewhere in its network will prompt them to visit four or five sites in the future, Patel said.

Yahoo spent the past year developing the platform. Much depends now on the creativity of developers to make it a success, Patel said.

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Mozilla Taps Web Guru Duo for Developer Tools Lab

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Web development gurus Dion Almaer and Ben Galbraith are leaving their previous positions, at Google and as a consultant respectively, to join forces and head up a new group at Mozilla called the Developer Tools Lab.

“We’re now the co-directors of the developer tools group at Mozilla and we’re really jazzed about it,” Almaer told eWEEK in an interview. “This is the first time the dominant platform is the open Web platform and is not in a position where a specific vendor has control over it. We’re psyched about building tools and making them available to everybody as open-source software.”

Almaer and Galbraith co-founded the popular Ajaxian.com site and are known as a hot draw on the developer-oriented trade show circuit. The team has a particular style that plays well to developers as they joke and banter amongst themselves, with Almaer’s British wit playing against Galbraith’s impish American-geek sense of humor. Other talented technical presentation duos that come to mind include Don Box and Chris Anderson of Microsoft and Miguel de Icaza and Nat Friedman of Novell and Ximian fame.

Almaer and Galbraith will be missed by their former employers, but welcomed with open arms at Mozilla. Almaer served as an engineer and evangelist on Google’s open-source team, where he contributed to several projects and turned out some of the best video interviews and other content related to Google’s developer-oriented initiatives. In addition to serving as a software consultant to many organizations, at MediaBank Galbraith was CIO and chief software architect.

Almaer said despite having left Google to start up a developer tools effort inside Mozilla, he has not severed ties to the search giant. Indeed, he said he hopes to maintain a close relationship with Google and other potential partners such as Adobe Systems.

“Being Mozilla and open, we want to work with other companies on this,” Almaer said. “We are especially excited to work with companies like Google who care about the open Web.”

Galbraith said Mozilla is focused on “creating development tools that make the open Web productive for developers.”

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RIM Strengthens Developer Tools

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

With an upcoming mobile application store set to launch in a few months, Research In Motion unveiled upgraded developer tools to enable content creators to make richer, more-compelling applications for BlackBerry handsets.

The company said it wanted developers to be able to harness the power of the Web, and a new toolkit in 2009 will have a plug-in for Eclipse developers, new features for the BlackBerry plug-in for Microsoft’s Visual Studio, as well as support for Gears.

“As the BlackBerry Browser evolves to provide customers with a richer, more desktop-like experience, we are introducing powerful new Web development tools and technologies to help developers create a more robust and optimal Web experience for BlackBerry smartphone users,” said Alan Brenner, senior VP for the BlackBerry platform, in a statement. “Supporting Web technologies and services is part of our ongoing commitment to providing best-in-class tools and services for mobile application development on the BlackBerry platform.”

With the tools for Web development, content makers will be able to build rich applications using HTML, JavaScript, and XML that get packaged and executed as native Java applications on BlackBerry handsets.

RIM said Gears support will let developers build highly responsive standalone Web apps for BlackBerry that can be used in and out of network coverage. It will include database and multithreaded JavaScript execution, as well as local cache.

Third-party developers also will be able to create their own push applications, as RIM will be offering APIs for its push technology. The push APIs will be gradually released over the next few quarters, RIM said.

The push APIs would be rolled out quicker, but the company wants to make sure that security remains the highest priority. David Yach, RIM’s CTO for software, said everyone would be “in a world of hurt if there’s some serious security problem on BlackBerry.”

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