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INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPER - JUNE 2007
Programming power

Web DU: Adobe Down Under

Web DU is a celebration of all things Australian in application development. Prominantly sponsored by Adobe the event is now in it’s fifth year and was timed to coincide with the launch of Apollo in Australia.


Inside Intel: Parallel or perish!

Lisbon was the venue for the 2007 annual Intel EMEA software development conference. International Developer attended to learn more about the company’s vision for the next generation of computing.


Zeus

At Zeus, they build some pretty sophisticated applications and they’re trying to recruit software developers who understand the low-level fundamentals they use.


Compuware: glue for development & QA

An alternative to the traditional approach to unit and functional testing has emerged – Continuous Integrated Testing (CIT). Matthew Finch senior sales specialist with Compuware Australia explains.


Human Inference

Companies and organisations which collect consumer and customer data use this information to analyse and measure specific behavior and align their sales techniques to personal needs. Holger Wandt from Human Inference explains all.


Passwords - Friend Or Foe?

Bill Gates believes that arming everyone with yet more complex technology will make electronic transactions safer. While this may be true for those prepared or able to use such technology, there’s a lot more that communications networks can do to take the strain and keep things simple, argues Richard Baker, BT’s chief identity architect.


Enterprise IT evolution

Since the 1990s enterprise IT systems such as Customer Relationship Management (CRM) and Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) have been hailed as the saviours of business, offering huge efficiency and productivity savings to sectors including manufacturing, telecoms, utilities and financial services. Colin Rickard, managing director EMEA of DataFlux takes a look at how we can Maximise the value of enterprise IT systems through best practice data management principles.



Features


Actimagine

This is where the new challenge to Moore’s Law lies: the greater the screen size, the greater the resolution. The greater the resolution, the greater the processing-power requirement because the processor has to process more pixels per second.


Advanced Gaming Physics

Some confusion about what constitutes “advanced gaming physics” still exists. Can it be performed by multicore CPUs? Are general purpose graphics chips up to the task? Or do you need a dedicated Physics Processing Unit (PPU)?


Sander Hoogendoorn

A superb paper on Implementing Value Objects.


Information Builders

How many people in your organisation regard IT not only as an enabler of change, but also as a constraint to growth in many cases?



Specials

Consensus Awards

The Consensus Software Awards are the only independently judged Award program exclusively for Australian and New Zealand designed and developed software. This year, 2006/7 will be the eighth season and we expect that it will again attract the best software from across Australian and New Zealand.



Books

WILEY: Professional WCF Programming

APRESS: Hotmail history: how it all started



Regulars

Developer News

Opinion: SUN

VBUG

SW review: UML Diagrammer

SW review: MadCap Mimic

Opinion: SafeNet

Book Reviews

Event: Developer Diary

Developer Web Watch

Opinion: Erudine

 
Editors Letter
Picture of the Editor  
Alphabet Street 

Each month we try our hardest to cover every angle and aspect of software engineering. Indeed, we pride ourselves on our platform-agnostic wide ranging view of the development landscape. How then could we push ourselves even further and really broaden the spectrum of our editorial coverage? The answer had to be – the complete A to Z of software. Well, not complete, but a rip roaring twenty-six letter technology tour to provoke some interest and thoughts in areas you might not normally think about.

But first, a personal confession so that you know how all this started. I actually got the idea from reading a cookery magazine that had done something similar. You know the kind of thing – A for apples, B for bread, C for custard and so on. But those pesky food journalists have it easy don’t they? When they get to X, Y and Z they can just use X for Xérès Sherry, Y for Yeast and even Z for Zabaglione.

Now, X is simple enough with plenty of XMLs out there, Z for zero tolerance we reckoned, but Y, wow - now that is a hard one.

So, please dive in and jump to your favourite letter. It was always going to be the case that we would miss out on a few key areas, but we think it’s pretty cool to be able to work your way through the whole alphabet and just stay within the world of software development. Next month, 1001 aspects of application development and how you can implement them in your daily working schedule. Joke – ok?

Happy coding!

Adrian Bridgwater

Editor

Write to the Editor