|
Enterprise Architecture TrendWatch, by Kas Thomas
Kas Thomas is an Enterprise Architecture analyst at CMS Watch. He previously evaluated J2EE and content-related technologies for Novell. See More by Kas Thomas
E-MAIL |
Shocker: Microsoft Will Support jQuery
The last company on earth I'd expect to support open-source JavaScript libraries is Microsoft. By "support," I mean providing 24/7 product support through Microsoft Product Support Services (PSS). Microsoft's seemingly unusual move here stems from its recent decision to bundle jQuery (unmodified, not a forked version) with Visual Studio as part of Redmond's official development platform. "Going forward we'll use jQuery as one of the libraries used to implement higher-level controls in the ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit, as well as to implement new Ajax server-side helper methods for ASP.NET MVC," says Guthrie. This is certainly welcome news for the AJAX world (which owes its existence to Microsoft, who introduced the XMLHttpRequest object in Internet Explorer 5.0, back in 1999). Libraries like Dojo and jQuery represent a kind of programmatic Switzerland for the AJAX world, shielding programmers from disparate browser behaviors that otherwise tend to make AJAX programming problematic for the non-ninja. Microsoft could easily break Dojo, jQuery, and the rest of AJAX-kind if it were to make (further) unwelcome changes in the way IE supports things like DOM and XMLHttpRequest. The fact that Redmond is on board with jQuery means the status quo will probably be preserved. Or at least, that's the signal it sends. What will be interesting to see is whether Microsoft begins bundling (and providing 24/7 support for) other open-source products... and keeps its promise not to fork people's code. Is jQuery the beginning of a trend? Or the beginning of the end? We should know more in a few months. In the meantime, perhaps the dearth of Ajax controls that we cited in the SharePoint Report will be addressed sooner rather than later.
E-MAIL |
This is a public forum. United Business Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. United Business Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers. Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of United Business Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in United Business Media's Terms of Service. Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.
|
Blog Channels
The Brain Food Blogger SQL Puzzlers by Joe Celkoon Enterprise App Development on Changing the Enterprise by Shawn Shell by Kas Thomas Strategic Knowledge, by Dave Stodder Product Maven Subscribe to RSS feed of all blogs Archives
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
























