On July 11th it was time for RedMonk/James Governor’s Nanomonk”Adobe meets SAP: Nanoconference” in London. James Ward, Adobes’s Flex/RIA evangelist was in town, so James invited those interested to come and learn more.
The conference started with James (Ward) giving an overview over the state of Adobe’s software development platform.
Adobe is in a transition, moving away from people using tools to create flash content, to people creating software on their platform. Flex has been around for about around five years and started as a way for developers to create flash content. Today that tool is a platform for software development.
There are three critical pieces in this platform:
1. Runtimes
These are the critical core technologies and the software development stack.
Web runtime, Flash player, desktop runtime, AIR and mobile runtime (yes, they are currently working on this!)
2. Tooling
Flex SDK, Flex builder/Eclipse space and many different community tools
3. Integration
How do we actually connect these client-side applications to our backend servers and services?
BlazeDS -> open source product to connect to a Java backend
LiveCycle Data Services
Seen from the SDN community perspective Adobe still plays an active part.
Andre Salazar has recently joined the community, after Mathias Zeller left to work on Genesis.
Adobe is the title-sponsor for the RIA hacker night during this year’s TechEd. (so far it is confirmed for Las Vegas)
The technical integration between SAP and Adobe continues, and worth mentioning is:
- BlazeDS/LiveCycle Data Services
- Closer integration, into the development tools we already have, for instance with the Flash islands in Web Dynpro.
- FLOB, Flex integration into BSP.
- Muse; the Flex NetWeaver Business Client. Comment from Thomas Jung: Version 1.0 is available with ERP Enhancement package 2 and higher. Version 2.0 will be used for Business by Design. Version 3.0 will take all the good version 2.0 features and bring them to the core Business Suite as well.
One of Adobe’s tasks a head is to incorporate developers, as they struggle to understand them. (they get the designers)
One of the longest discussions of the day, was the discussion about the SAP-Adobe alliance ecosystem. I covered this discussion thoroughly on SDN, hoping to get the conversation started there.
James Ward also showed us the coolness of Flex/AIR applications:
(can you imagine the effect of showing potentially new customers something like this?)
Worth mentioning is also the Conference 2.0 aspect of this event.
We were live-streaming via Ustream.tv and tweeting about it at the same time, allowing those not physically present to engage in the conversation.
We had around 15 friends watching and chatting via Ustream.tv, and another bunch following us on Twitter.
I hope this was only the first conference of many to come!
Thank you James for organizing this, thank you James for stopping by, thank you Craig for editing the footage and thank you all for the great discussions!
You can find my flickr set from the event here.
Part 1:
Part 2:








Careful with all that Flash, Flex and AIR « Golden Pebbles 13:53 on Wednesday, 20 August, 2008 Permalink
[...] I read with interest James Governor’s write-up of his Adobe/SAP nanoconference and enjoyed watching the video, showcasing all kinds of cool new UI stuff you can do with Adobe [...]
James Governor’s Monkchips » Adobe SAP RedMonk: a nanomonk nanoconference 02:23 on Thursday, 24 July, 2008 Permalink
[...] I go though I should point to yojibee’s write-up of the event on her blog. She also called out some Adobe SAP ecosystem issues on the SDN blog [...]