Speak now
Please Wait Image Converting Into Text...
Embark on a journey of knowledge! Take the quiz and earn valuable credits.
Challenge yourself and boost your learning! Start the quiz now to earn credits.
Unlock your potential! Begin the quiz, answer questions, and accumulate credits along the way.
General Tech Technology & Software 2 years ago
Posted on 16 Aug 2022, this text provides information on Technology & Software related to General Tech. Please note that while accuracy is prioritized, the data presented might not be entirely correct or up-to-date. This information is offered for general knowledge and informational purposes only, and should not be considered as a substitute for professional advice.
Turn Your Knowledge into Earnings.
For a new application I need to make a decision on what frontend technology to use. I know this question has been asked before and I've found several studies, blogs and other references discussing Flash vs. Silverlight vs HTML5 vs JavaFX, but in my case there is a business requirement that complicates the situation.
The application must run as an offline, stand-alone desktop application and as an online client-server application and perhaps in the future it needs to run on tablets as well. And to minimise maintenance we would like to have just one code-base. The server side should preferably run on Linux.
From earlier projects we have experience with Java and Flex for the client-server configuration, but I haven't found out if it is possible to package this into a stand-alone application. Java and JavaFX would be an alternative, but JavaFX still seems to be immature and lacking development tools. If we go for Silverlight we would more or less have to switch to C# or C++ for the backend, or use something like JNBridge, which would make the stand-alone installation more complicated. And HTML5 would be the choice for the future, but less suited for a complex application and we might run into browser-dependencies.
So I haven't found the ideal solution yet and could use some help. Perhaps we need to limit the one code-base requirement only for the server/backend side and accept different front-ends for different usages.
Any thoughts appreciated. Thanks!
The Flash/Flex/AIR stuff now has an expiration date on it due to Adobe's terrible handling of the announcements at the end of 2011.
Silverlight is suffering in a similar way to Flex/Flash/AIR as Microsoft's announcements of future directions and developers feeling their investment in Silverlight is now wasted.
JavaFX is late to the party and the latest version is not available on all platforms. Are they targeting mobile nowadays?
HTML 5 is too much hype, not enough unified features across the major browsers. It will get there, but that's not today.
Switching to a completely unfamiliar stack of technology is going to be costly - there's no way you can do any reasonable estimates when it's all new to you and your team.
Personally, I'd suggest starting with technologies you're familiar with, which seems to be Java and Flex and add AIR to that mix.
I'd really push back on the tablet support as I think that requirement is vague, but has a huge impact on the project. I don't see a traditional UI on the desktop working well on a tablet. I'd say the tablet needs its own UI.
No matter what stage you're at in your education or career, TuteeHub will help you reach the next level that you're aiming for. Simply,Choose a subject/topic and get started in self-paced practice sessions to improve your knowledge and scores.
General Tech 10 Answers
General Tech 7 Answers
General Tech 3 Answers
General Tech 9 Answers
General Tech 2 Answers
Ready to take your education and career to the next level? Register today and join our growing community of learners and professionals.