This topic from Steve deserves more discussion. Please discuss.
Philip On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 1:33 PM, Steve Wart <[hidden email]> wrote:
On Fri, Jun 25, 2010 at 11:51 PM, Philip Weaver <[hidden email]> wrote: Hi Steve, On Wed, Jun 23,
2010 at 1:33 PM, Steve Wart <[hidden email]>
wrote:
I'd also consider the role of a
user. Is the user primarily a consumer of content or a producer of
content? Lively allows both at the same time. Sadly, most people in the
world today are primarily consumers and not programmers. I don't have a
final answer here but read on further below. Intended user base is
indeed worthy of discussion.
I have interest in pursuing both
of these but lean toward the latter, commercial development: I want to
focus on whatever goals will help sustain and provide funding for this
project. I wish and hope that Lively will become a disruptive technology
to transform web development and web graphics creation. 1. Browser
brings the history and bookmarks. 2. The toolkit brings it's own
rendering and layout: whether it be the Lively Kernel or other. Web
standards? Just say no. Use a canvas instead and your own toolkit. Also
relating to graphics development: just say no to splicing raster images
for web display: render them in Lively.
So for intended user base maybe: 1. professional
"web" developers but retrain them, 2. education Some
of the early Lively collateral discusses making web programming simpler
without HTML, CSS, DOM, etc. The problem has been that Lively has not
had enough layout support to realistically compete or replace HTML and
DOM.
Philip |
I spent a bit of time with pencil and paper this weekend mocking up
some ideas (didn't get far), not for "Lively", but something that started as an application of Lively, but then it morphed into a generic domain modelling UI. Which is something I lose myself in sometimes. Other people watch vampire movies. ymmv :) I also pointed my son at the tutorial site, but he got stuck on the WebDAV instructions to create a workspace for himself. I hit the same thing; I guess I should have come up with a slightly more comprehensive introduction for him. It might be good to post instructions for setting up a WebDAV server for people who want to play without relying on a central resource. Then yesterday I must have been bored at work so I had a fairly close look at Google's Web Toolkit (aka GWT). If you're not familiar with it, it's a fairly impressive open-source system that compiles Java into Javascript, at the same time exposing a fairly comprehensive widget library. Now I haven't had a lot of success with Java in my life, but I was impressed at what someone can do if they have a significant amount of committed resources to building a development environment. GTK/Eclipse/Windows wasn't particularly fun to work with, but I guess it would be good for business applications. So I guess I'm asking in a roundabout way about support and funding and where is Lively going. Maybe there's no clear answer to that right now. That may be okay, because it's all out there for anyone to build on. But as well as thinking about Lively as an application of web technology it might also make sense to think of different ways Lively can be applied to scratch various itches that people have. I thought the tutorial was a great start (except for the part where I couldn't save a workspace - that kind of stopped me). It might just be simple things like taking the e-mail postings that Robert pointed me at and putting them together in a nicely formatted web page. Or hosting them in Lively itself. I think it's probably just as easy to create morphs for your mockup as it is to use the Google drawing code, as long as you don't get carried away. Is there an "undo"? Cheers Steve On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 5:33 PM, Philip Weaver <[hidden email]> wrote: > This topic from Steve deserves more discussion. Please discuss. > > Philip > > On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 1:33 PM, Steve Wart <[hidden email]> wrote: >> >> >> One thing that Apple insists on when defining the user experience for a >> new application is to come up with a clear statement of purpose. Not only >> what it is its intended user base (casual, professional, etc.), but also >> what it is explicitly not intended for. What *can't* Lively do?. >> >> I've seen a couple of posts from Dan on his vision for Lively, but I still >> wonder, is it an educational environment, or is it something people can use >> to build commercial quality client-server applications? >> >> Smalltalk evolved in rather unexpected ways I think. I don't think I'm >> looking for Lively on Rails, but I am interested in applications that appeal >> to mainstream development needs. >> >> Steve >> > > On Fri, Jun 25, 2010 at 11:51 PM, Philip Weaver <[hidden email]> wrote: > Hi Steve, > > On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 1:33 PM, Steve Wart <[hidden email]> wrote: >> >> Yes I noticed that you've done a huge amount of work. I asked about the >> IDE because that is how I conceptualize the object model. Once I understand >> that hopefully all the rest of it will come together for me. >> >> One thing that Apple insists on when defining the user experience for a >> new application is to come up with a clear statement of purpose. Not only >> what it is its intended user base (casual, professional, etc.), but also >> what it is explicitly not intended for. What *can't* Lively do?. > > I'd also consider the role of a user. Is the user primarily a consumer of > content or a producer of content? Lively allows both at the same time. > Sadly, most people in the world today are primarily consumers and not > programmers. I don't have a final answer here but read on further below. > Intended user base is indeed worthy of discussion. > >> >> I've seen a couple of posts from Dan on his vision for Lively, but I still >> wonder, is it an educational environment, or is it something people can use >> to build commercial quality client-server applications? > > I have interest in pursuing both of these but lean toward the latter, > commercial development: I want to focus on whatever goals will help sustain > and provide funding for this project. I wish and hope that Lively will > become a disruptive technology to transform web development and web > graphics creation. 1. Browser brings the history and bookmarks. 2. The > toolkit brings it's own rendering and layout: whether it be the Lively > Kernel or other. Web standards? Just say no. Use a canvas instead and your > own toolkit. Also relating to graphics development: just say no to splicing > raster images for web display: render them in Lively. > So for intended user base maybe: 1. professional "web" developers but > retrain them, 2. education > Some of the early Lively collateral discusses making web programming simpler > without HTML, CSS, DOM, etc. The problem has been that Lively has not had > enough layout support to realistically compete or replace HTML and DOM. > Philip > |
Inline...
On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 7:59 PM, Steve Wart <[hidden email]> wrote: I spent a bit of time with pencil and paper this weekend mocking up Here are old instructions I put together and used - however last summer. http://lists.hpi.uni-potsdam.de/archive/lively-kernel/2010-April/000386.html Then yesterday I must have been bored at work so I had a fairly close I mentioned previously on the list that I'm familiar with many web toolkits. :-) Lively is still the most important. However also look at Vaadin: it's very pretty and based on GWT. So I guess I'm asking in a roundabout way about support and funding I am simply asking that we discuss funding on the list or off the list. Mockups and funding. If no one involved with this project is currently exploring funding for Lively or some derivative (non-profit or vc) then that's a great tragedy. It's been a year since Sun abandoned this project. There's profit and there's sustainability. Other projects sustain with a GUI builder. Lively has one built-in. But if you look closely at some of Lively's goals there is still a business opportunity there - hands. You asked: is it an educational environment, or is it something people can use to build commercial quality client-server applications? My discussion of mockups and funding are related. Lively needs to graduate from being a research project. If no one is exploring funding at all, hopefully current and future mockups will help open eyes that this project deserves funding beyond academic support. I thought the tutorial was a great start (except for the part where I I think Jens or Robert at HPI have been drafting undo but I can't say that it's released. HPI is doing awesome work with Webwerkstatt. http://www.lively-kernel.org/repository/webwerkstatt/ http://www.lively-kernel.org/repository/webwerkstatt/jens/journal/journal.xhtml http://www.lively-kernel.org/repository/webwerkstatt/robert/rk-journal.xhtml http://www.lively-kernel.org/repository/webwerkstatt/projects/ Philip Cheers |
Hi,
Am 01.07.10 04:31, schrieb Philip Weaver:
I enabled the multiple Undo and Redo support now in the lively wiki. Command + Z Undo Command + Shift + Z Redo http://www.lively-kernel.org/repository/lively-wiki/documentation/TextEditing.xhtml Best Jens |
In reply to this post by Philip Weaver
Please see also http://lively-kernel.org/other/livelyInstallMac.mov Best, Robert
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