Jun 25, 2009
  • Ux
  • Tx
  • Sx
, , ,

Adobe User Group World Tour Comes to Roundarch

By Pek Pongpaet

On Thursday June 18th, a Chicago RIA community including the Chicago Flex Users Group and the Chicago Adobe Users Group welcomed the Adobe User Group World Tour that came to demo the latest version of Flex 4. Adobe Platform Evangelist Kevin Hoyt presented Flash Catalyst, Adobe’s new interaction design tool geared towards rapid creation of rich internet applications, Flex 4, the latest version of Flex, and Flash Builder, Adobe’s new offering for creating RIAs. Flash Catalyst was presented at Ascend training in the afternoon while Flex 4 and Flash builder were demoed at the Roundarch Chicago office in the evening.

Here’s a video of the Flex 4 Flash Builder presentation at Roundarch.

Read More | | Comments (0) | TrackBacks |      Digg!   Delicious

Riapalooza 2 A Must for RIA Enthusiasts

By Pek Pongpaet

Last month Chicago had our very own gathering of great minds in the Rich Internet Application (RIA) space. Riapalooza, as it’s called, is a yearly one day conference meant to foster the RIA community in the midwest region. This year’s event was held Friday, May 8th at the Illinois Technology Association (200 S Wacker Drive 15th Floor Chicago, IL) and is the second one of its kind. Riapalooza aims to be technology agnostic and as such we had representatives from many players in the space including a contingency of Microsoft evangelists and few Adobe evangelists.

Adobe has been in the RIA space a long time with its Flash runtime being ubiquitous in over 98% of all desktops. Flash Lite, Adobe’s mobile Flash runtime is forecasted to be in over 1 BILLION mobile devices by 2009. Adobe’s AIR runtime, a cross platform runtime that brings RIAs to the desktop, already has over 100 million installs.

Microsoft on the other hand is a relative new player in the RIA space. Although they’ve been on the web with their .NET platform for a while, it wasn’t as rich an experience as some of the stuff people are used to seeing today. Even though Microsoft was a pioneer in the RIA space with their XmlHttpRequest, a cornerstone in rich AJAX enabled websites today, their early RIA offerings were met with limited success. Lately Microsoft has been pushing Silverlight, a cross platform RIA runtime meant to compete head on with Flash.

The event itself had a very good turnout. The conference room was packed with developers in the industry. The sessions covered a variety of topics from real world RIA problems, consuming 3rd party APIs in Flex, case studies, to RIAs controlled by alternative user interfaces. The six sessions were jam packed with material. I really enjoyed Corey Miller’s Building Interactive Applications Using UX Principles. His presentation can be found on his blog.

The “unconference” also had panel discussions during lunch which was great because it really engaged the audience through participation. Larry Clarkin did a great job of moderating and seeding questions and getting the conversation going. Topics included RIAs and the emerging mobile platform, the definition of RIA, what an evangelist is and what do they do, to how the various companies are approaching RIAs as well. It was great to see Adobe and Microsoft representatives butt heads in a friendly rivalry. What was also great was that user experience (UX) with respect to RIAs was probably given as much face time as RIA technologies. There were discussions of emerging computing areas that will be affected by RIAs such as mobile and touch screens.

Riapalooza is a definite must for developers in the industry interested in learning more about RIAs, meeting new people, connecting with experts and thought leaders in the industry, and keeping up with RIA news and technology. And at $20 a pop, $10 for early registration, it’s a no brainer.

A recap of the talk that Adam Flater and I gave on RIAs beyond the Mouse and Keyboard can be found here.


Follow the speakers and Riapalooza orgainizers on Twitter

Read More | | Comments (0) | TrackBacks |      Digg!   Delicious
Nov 13, 2008
  • Ux
  • Tx
  • Sx
, , , ,

Roundarch and Avis Speak at Interwoven Analyst Day

By Paul Buranosky
Left to right: John Peebles, Aman Datta, Ray Picard, Jeff Westover and Ben Kiker.

Left to right: John Peebles of Avis Budget Group, Aman Datta of Roundarch, Ray Picard, Jeff Westover and Ben Kiker of Interwoven.

Aman Data, Vice President of Roundarch, and John Peebles, Vice President Online Marketing at Avis Budget Group, presented Roundarch’s upcoming redesign of AVIS.com to a group of industry and financial analysts at Interwoven’s analyst day today in New York.  Avis and Roundarch discussed the Q1 upcoming relaunch of AVIS.com as well as several innovative changes that are being advanced in the market today.  One of the key innovations is the development of an “extra” site experience.  Customers can now perform a full reservation process in a single rich widget.  This widget is currently featured on www.rentacar.com and will be used on many Avis partner sites in the future.  The widget, developed in Adobe Flex, is one of many innovations that Roundarch and Avis are bringing to the travel market.

Read More | | Comments (0) | TrackBacks |      Digg!   Delicious
Nov 5, 2008
  • Ux
  • Tx
  • Sx
, ,

Presenting at AdobeMAX 2008 in San Francisco

By Jeff Maling

These are certainly interesting times. And if you make a living driving innovative web projects like Roundarch, then things just got a whole lot tougher. In the past week, three of my most senior clients cited the Sequoia presentation as an indication of their bearish outlook for the future. Everyone seems to be preparing for the nuclear winter which in many companies will include spending and hiring freezes, layoffs, and a tendency to play it safe rather than make bold strategic moves. At Roundarch, we have believed for quite some time in the transformational nature of rich internet applications, and our clients who have deployed them across the enterprise have achieved outsized gains vis a vis their competitors. Is it still possible to create competitive differentiation using rich internet applications in these difficult times? We think so. Two quick facts: the iPod was launched shortly after 9/11 and Fortune Magazine was launched in 1932. We believe that turbulent economic times are the perfect time to launch transformational technologies. Several of our clients are using this time to build rich applications that should revolutionize their marketplaces. But even if you can’t convince your management to make bold moves, there are many ways to keep innovating using the rich internet as a tool of differentiation. Uris and I are looking forward to discussing how AVIS, A&E, Motorola and others are doing just that in our talk on Tuesday (Nov. 18, 9:00 am - 10:00 am). For example, AVIS and Roundarch have created transactional banner ads (in Adobe Flex) that allow AVIS customers to complete a full reservation without even visiting AVIS.com. This innovation completely changes the traditional strategy of pushing everyone to your URL. They also have a full page version that they are deploying on affiliate sites. In both cases, AVIS is using rich technologies to completely challenge the status quo and doing it without breaking the bank.

The title of the talk is “Building Successful RIAs for the Enterprise in a Climate of Financial Uncertainty.” It is a mouthful. Perhaps a better title should have been “Thrive vs. Survive” which is core to our message. We strongly believe that those companies that use this economic downturn to push even more innovation will take significant share from those who just try to survive.

AdobeMAX

Read More | | Comments (0) | TrackBacks |      Digg!   Delicious
Jul 1, 2008
  • Ux
  • Tx
  • Sx
, , , , , , ,

RIAPalooza Recap - Thoughts and Photos

By Dave Meeker

The inaugural RIAPalooza event turned out to be quite successful and interesting for everyone who attended. For photos, check out the stream on Flickr and also view the Twitter stream.

I find that a lot of conferences become clouded with sales pitches disguised as presentations and force-fed information that is designed to push agendas of one form or another. This is why RIAPalooza was such a refreshing difference.

As an event that was conceived, planned, and put on by members of the Chicago development community, RIAPalooza was really focused on honest expert opinions and group discussions about the various platforms available for RIA design and development.

I was honored to be able to give the conference opening presentation on Friday evening. As usual, I couldn’t help but to talk about the importance of user experience and about how the technologies that we now have as part of our design and development toolkits are much less about technology and more about enabling people to take creative ideas and bring them to fruition.

In my presentation, I gave an overview of the last 13 years of user interface technologies that we’ve had at our disposal and how they’ve evolved to the fantastic tools that we have today. In addition, I shared some concepts with the audience that I believe will be instrumental in the next 3 or so years as we continue to work as creative problem solvers with a flair for digital end-products and both online and off-line user experiences.

After my talk, all of the speakers that were in attendance joined me in front of the conference attendees for a rather lively panel discussion. There was no topic for the panel, rather “just ask what you want to ask.” This format lead to some rather interesting and unexpected topics. One would think that most of the questions would be related to specific technologies or “the how” of Rich Internet Application development. Instead, the audience seemed to focus their questions on other topics, all of much more interest to a guy like me! Some of the items that were touched on:
  • What business factors go into deciding which RIA platform would be best for me?
  • How can I convince my upper management that user experience matters and that we need to build more experiential software?
  • How do you convince large corporations to adopt new creative technologies? What is the justification?
  • Are plugins an issue? Whether it be Adobe Flex or Microsoft Silverlight, users need a plugin. How do we justify this?
  • How is the process of designing and building a Rich Internet Application different than the Web sites or software that we have been building?
As you can imagine, the panel of experts had a lot to say! The information that was shared with the audience was spot on and extremely useful and I am sure that the panel discussion added a lot of value for those in attendance. The panel, which was supposed to only run for a bit and end prior to 9:00 PM went over and we were still taking questions when the facility started turning off lights and kicking us all out. That doesn’t happen often, and was a sign for me that the presentations for this conference were going to be really valuable and interesting.

The rest of the conference (on Saturday) was filled with back-to-back knowledge sharing and expert insight into RIA design and development and because of the mix of presenters, covered the range of tools and technologies available in the market.

I spent the majority of my time speaking with Josh Holmes and Mike Labriola. Josh is a new Silverlight/RIA evangelist from Microsoft and Mike is a friend, fellow Chicagoan and perhaps one of the most wicked Adobe Flex architects on the planet. Mike is the founder of Digital Primates and works with Jeff Tapper and Mike Nimer… some of the brightest minds in the Adobe enterprise development community.

Josh and Mike teamed up to give a co-presentation on RIA best practices from both a MS and Adobe technology perspective and didn’t only provide some great information, were great together and highly entertaining. I really hope to do some more talks with these guys and would love to seem them tag-team again at some larger events.

Personally, I found that the information presented by the handful of Microsoft staffers at the conference to be really valuable. As the guy who manages Roundarch’s relationship inside Microsoft’s “Mercury Agency Professional Program” I am often more focused on strategy and creative idea generation than “how to build” things. For someone who is generally a bit further away from the code than I sometimes should be, the information that was presented was worthwhile to say the least.

I learned a lot from Corey Miller and Anthony Hendley, clearly experts in MS Silverlight, WPF and XAML and was blown away by the expertise that both Corrina Barber and Tim Heuer showed (and shared) regarding Silverlight development and designer-developer collaboration and workflow. Very valuable and eye-opening stuff, and critical to anyone that is going to embark on a Silverlight-based project.

I was also really pleased to hear some of the ideas that have been brewed in my fair city of Chicago as Ka Wai Cheung (From We Are Mammoth) talked about his project that combines .NET with Flex and is essentially an online application built in .NET that builds Adobe Flex applications. It is innovation like this that really inspires me (and should inspire everyone!)

Lastly, Geoff Cubitt, President of Roundarch, showed off some of the applications that we’ve built in both AJAX and Adobe Flex and talked about how application development changes when moving from non-rich to “richer” to “very rich” UI technologies. People really “got it” when he showed off the demo application that we’ve developed for Fast (enterprise search) with an Adobe Flex UI. Fast was just purchased by Microsoft so it was great to show another example where technology from both Adobe and Microsoft have been leveraged to create a killer user experience.

All in all, it was a great experience and I was fortunate to have met some of the interesting people that I did and have such great conversations. It is a real testament to the will of the “community” that events like this are taking shape across the country (and world). It is thrilling to see that a lot of the ideas that I’ve been harping on for years becoming accepted by the masses and that the community as a whole is now focusing on technology as a means to create better user experiences.

Read More | | Comments (0) | TrackBacks |      Digg!   Delicious
 
  
 

Categories

Tags

Search

RSS Feed

Archives

Blogroll

Links