| Article: |
Are "how to" books archaic? | |
| Subject: | How-to books & programming | |
| Date: | 2003-11-09 17:06:24 | |
| From: | anonymous2 | |
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`. . . most developers haven't yet grasped just how completely the programming model is about to change.' Thus Tim O'Reilly.
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Showing messages 1 through 4 of 4.
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How-to books & programming
2004-06-12 19:18:41 David Lents [Reply | View]
This is a test
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How-to books & programming
2003-11-10 14:22:23 Tim O'Reilly [Reply | View]
As Dave Stutz remarked, "software above the level of a single device will command high margins for years to come." We're moving away from the era of software targeted to a single device into a world in which software routinely incorporates remote data sources via web services, may have an n-tier architecture in order to support multiple front ends on top of a robust server-based back end, etc. In short, I'm just pointing out that there's a huge amount to learn. You're not programming your father's PC any more, so to speak. Or even your father's web site. We're starting to program the net itself. -
Wow that was a lot of jargon
2005-10-13 10:21:57 GoClick [Reply | View]
Wow that was a lot of jargon and buzzwordary to cram into one paragraphy.
I think what he's trying to say is, we're not just making programs to run on people's computers anymore. There is a shift into making (generaly) web applications that take the place of those desktop style applications.
The main difference with these newer style applications is their more useful because their always up to date and they allow you to access your data and their functionality from any computer with a modern web browser.
There aren't just the web applications the end user sees either tho. There are the "behind the screens" applications that do things like harvest data (google news) that allow the developers to more efficiently interact with eachother which leads to more innovation.
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How-to books & programming
2003-11-10 11:21:35 Mary Hubben [Reply | View]
Tim talks about this in an eWeek interview at www.eweek.com/article2/0,4149,1187612,00.asp .




