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John Fallows

John Fallows is a pioneer in the field of rich and highly interactive user interfaces and co-founder of Kaazing Corporation. He recently worked as Architect at Brane Corporation, a startup company based in Redwood City, California. Originally from Northern Ireland, Mr. Fallows graduated from Cambridge University in the United Kingdom and has worked in the software industry for more than ten years. Prior to joining Brane, Mr. Fallows was a Consulting Member of Technical Staff for Server Technologies at Oracle Corporation. During his last 5 years at Oracle, Mr. Fallows focused on designing, developing, and evolving Oracle ADF Faces to fully integrate Ajax technologies. Mr. Fallows has written several articles for leading IT magazines such as Java Developer's Journal, AjaxWorld Magazine, and JavaMagazine (DE), and is a popular speaker at international conferences. Mr. Fallows is co-author of the recently published book Pro JSF and Ajax: Building Rich Internet Components, (Apress). In his role as chief technology officer, Mr. Fallows formulates the Kaazing Corporation's vision of creating the best real-time Web framework based on the Java standard. He defines the architecture of the Kaazing product suite and oversees its development.
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Why the Web Dinosaurs
Died By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows; Ric Smith; Brian Albers  A fast-moving Comet is
about to impact the
Internet. When it hits,
it will wipe away the
architecture flaws we
have lived with for the
past 15 years and allow a
new World Wide Web to
evolve. This new Web will
include applications that
are instantly on and
always o... Jul. 10, 2008 12:30 PM Reads: 2,549 | JavaServer Faces and AJAX
for Google Fans By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  This is our last article
in a series of four that
have been introducing the
concepts of creating
AJAX-enabled JavaServer
Faces (JSF) components.
In this article we are
going to summarize and
encapsulate the concepts
that were introduced in
the three previous JDJ
a... May. 16, 2007 08:00 PM Reads: 51,681 Replies: 3 | AJAX and Mozilla XUL with
JavaServer Faces By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  This article introduces a
new open source project -
Weblets - which can be
found on the java.net
website (http://weblets.d
ev.java.net). The goal of
this open source project
is to provide JSF
component writers with a
facility that can serve
resource files out of a
... May. 12, 2007 05:45 PM Reads: 84,840 Replies: 7 | Enterprise Comet: Awaken
the Grizzly! By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  There's a common
misconception among many
end users, consumers, and
developers that AJAX is
the ultimate solution for
the Web and that it can
provide all the same
functionality as a rich
desktop solution. Sure,
AJAX can cover most of
our expectations for a
rich cl... Feb. 1, 2007 09:00 PM Reads: 22,967 | JavaServer Faces and AJAX
for Google Fans By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  This is our last article
in a series of four that
have been introducing the
concepts of creating
AJAX-enabled JavaServer
Faces (JSF) components.
In this article we are
going to summarize and
encapsulate the concepts
that were introduced in
the three previous
artic... Oct. 21, 2006 07:45 PM Reads: 14,235 | Apache Trinidad - A World
Cup Skinning Experience? By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  One of the 2006 Soccer
World Cup highlights must
surely be the Trinidad
and Tobago versus Sweden
game. The underdogs
Trinidad and Tobago
managed to push off the
onslaught from the
Swedish team. The game
ended 0-0, which was for
the people of Trinidad
and Tobago a ... Sep. 24, 2006 05:00 PM Reads: 29,542 Replies: 2 | Creating AJAX and Rich
Internet Components with
JSF By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  In our previous article -
'Rich Internet Components
with JavaServer Faces'
(JDJ, Vol. 10, issue 11)
- we discussed how
JavaServer Faces can
fulfill new presentation
requirements without
sacrificing application
developer productivity
building Rich Internet
Applica... Sep. 10, 2006 03:30 PM Reads: 71,328 Replies: 7 | The Benefits Of The AJAX
RenderKit By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  In an effort to provide
developers with a
productive environment,
Oracle has been working
on a very rich UI
component framework for
several years. This
framework - ADF Faces -
has now been donated to
the open source
community. More
precisely, it has been
donated... Jun. 14, 2006 01:30 PM Reads: 36,816 Replies: 1 | Real-World AJAX Seminar,
New York: AJAX and Faces
- Friends or Foes? By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows Can a client-side AJAX
solution and server-side
Faces solution co-exist
and play well together?
Or are they each solving
a similar problem in a
different and
incompatible way? May. 28, 2006 02:45 PM Reads: 12,492 Replies: 3 | Super-Charge JSF AJAX
Data Fetch By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  In our last article -
'JSF and AJAX' (JDJ, Vol.
11, issue 1) - we
discussed how JavaServer
Faces component writers
can take advantage of the
new Weblets Open Source
project (http://weblets.d
ev.java.net) to serve
resources such as
JavaScript libraries,
icons, and ... Apr. 20, 2006 12:15 PM Reads: 44,756 Replies: 3 | AjaxWorld Special:
Creating AJAX and Rich
Internet Components with
JSF By Jonas Jacobi; John Fallows  JavaServer Faces (JSF)
standardizes the
server-side component
model for Web application
development but doesn't
standardize the
presentation layer at the
browser. In a series of
articles we are going to
look at how JSF can
fulfill new presentation
requirements wit... Apr. 6, 2006 09:30 AM Reads: 88,057 Replies: 5 |
TODAY'S TOP 10 LINKS YOU MUST CLICK ON! YOUR FEEDBACK  | Is Sun Looking to Replace
CEO Jonathan Schwartz? By Maureen O'Gara Brigdson Smith wrote:
remember, Eric Schmidt
was Schwartz's first boss
at Sun - something tells
me if he left Sun, it'd
take four minutes for him
to end up to Google. |  | What Does the Future Hold
for the Java Language? By Joe Winchester Tommy wrote: I simply do
not agree on many parts:
- .NET has a lot of
traction
- you can
certainly know well (and
master) more than one
language. If you cannot
master more than one
language, this could
potentially be one of
your limits.
- Java is not a perfect
language
- It is ea... |  | i-Technology Opinion: Why
Use Extreme Programming? By Troy Holmes James Nwaba wrote: This
is a nice article - very
straight froward, easy to
understand.However, there
was no mention of any
organization that have
implemented XP.
The author said, "Many of
the concepts found in
this lightweight method
of development have been
implemented into the ... |  | iPhone Office: 100 Ways
to Turn Your Device into
the Ultimate Productivity
Tool By Jessica Merritt QueZZtion wrote: Can the
iPhone really work as a
multimedia remote for
iTunes or even a desktop? |  | DoJa in NTT DoCoMo Phones By Zev Blut Venkat wrote: Excellent
explanation. It will be
helpful if it was in
pictorial form ie with
the emulator images. Can
u please send me the
I-mode to I appli
communication and a brief
explanatioj about the
architecture.Thanks in
advance. |
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