thanks for saying so :-)
we've been working hard for more than 5 years on our mash-up
technologies. In fact, the Swing team did a little blurb on our visual
mash-up developer tools used to extract/convert HTML to WML-- the old
wireless markup. Here's a screen shot from 2003 (from Swing Sightings
#15) of our Mashup developer tool extracting an HTML TABLE element of
WiFi hotspots and then transcoding it to a WML table:
http://java.sun.com/products/jfc/tsc/sightings/S15/Mobile/StudioScreenSnapz002.jpg
Of course, in 2003 nobody called it mash-up or Web 2.0. In fact, in
most of our documentation we still use the engineering term
"transcoding".
--Zaid
ALT Mobile
http://altmobile.com/Home.html (web site)
http://web.mac.com/altmobile/ (official blog)
On Feb 5, 2008, at 10:14 AM, charlie hunt wrote:
> This is very impressive!
>
> charlie ...
>
> Jeanfrancois Arcand wrote:
>> Wow!!
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> -- Jeanfrancois
>>
>> ALT Mobile DEV wrote:
>>> To commemorate Grizzly's open source birthday, I just announced
>>> the <alt> Dynamic Mashup Server on the company blog. Truth be
>>> told, we launched the blog just for Grizzly :-)
>>>
>>> The blog can be found at: http://web.mac.com/altmobile/
>>> --Zaid
>>>
>>> ALT Mobile
>>>
>>> http://altmobile.com/Home.html
>>>
>>> ---
>>>
>>>
>>> Dynamic Mashup Server Debuts
>>> *
>>> Tuesday, February 5, 2008
>>> *
>>>
>>> We are pleased to announce the *<alt> Dynamic Mashup Server*.
>>> Built to support internet scale amalgamation of web content, the
>>> *Dynamic Mashup Server* is the industry’s first Comet enabled mash-
>>> up server.
>>> Implementing all of the major AJAX and Comet technologies such as
>>> XHR multipart, forever frame, XHR streaming, and forever script;
>>> the *Dynamic Mashup Server** *supports HTTP Streaming to desktop
>>> browsers as well as Safari on iPhone. Single-site browsers (SSB)
>>> such as Mozilla's Prism <http://labs.mozilla.com/2007/10/prism>
>>> and widget platforms such as Opera Widgets <http://widgets.opera.com/
>>> >, Microsoft Vista Sidebar Gadgets, and Mac OS X Dashboard are
>>> also supported clients.
>>>
>>> Comet services are provided through a custom version of Sun's
>>> Grizzly <https://grizzly.dev.java.net/> web server technology.
>>>
>>>
>>> Other cool features of the *Dynamic Mashup Server *include RSS
>>> mash-up feed generation and text-to-speech output to support
>>> visually impaired user access.
>>>
>>> Implemented to run on 64-bit Java Virtual Machines, the *Dynamic
>>> Mashup Server* integrates into our virtual Web 2.0 containers
>>> which provide isolated access and execution of remote web content
>>> ensuring that mash-up clients are protected from potentially
>>> harmful HTML and JavaScript. Mash-up isolation is also necessary
>>> to avoid XSS attacks.
>>>
>>> The perfect companion to our Web 2.0 developer tools <http://altmobile.com/Technologies/Web%202.0/Web%202.0.html
>>> >, the *Dynamic Mashup Server* supports mash-up RDF meta models
>>> which provide a realistic implementation of the semantic web.
>>>
>>> The *<alt> Dynamic Mashup Server* will be available in Q2 of this
>>> year.
>>>
>>>
>>> ###
>>
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>
> --
>
> Charlie Hunt
> Java Performance Engineer
>
> <http://java.sun.com/docs/performance/>
>
>
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