The OpenAjax Alliance is trying to gee up the AJAX community after a
disappointing response to its call for a wish list of
features vendors should add to browsers.
The Alliance - a cross-industry group whose goal is
interoperability between AJAX
technologies and to drive uptake of AJAX - issued the call at the
start of April 2008.
It invited interested parties to cast votes on the
features they would most like to see, with a report to be
presented to developers of browser technology later this
year.
Two months later, and with June billed as phase II review
time just 13 people have bothered to cast their votes and
several of these are members of the Alliance's Runtime
Advocacy Task Force - the group behind the original features
list. The Alliance boasts members from more than 100
companies, organizations and projects.
This all poses a problem for the Alliance, as its
committed to next month produce its report. With 13
responses, those making browsers such as Microsoft, Mozilla
and Opera - Alliance members - are unlikely to take the
report seriously. Interestingly, Microsoft's OpenAjax member
Bertrand Le Roy did actually bother to vote.
Announcing the effort in April, the Alliance said its main
purpose was to: To inform the browser vendors about what
future features are most important to the AJAX community and why.
As a result, the Alliance this week published a white
paper heralding a return of the browser wars and, once more,
encouraging "technical experts in AJAX application development" to
vote.
The paper declared: "The alliance also wants to reach out
beyond the AJAX toolkit
providers to leading AJAX
developers, particularly enterprise developers. Anyone from
the community can participate in this effort, whether a
member of OpenAjax Alliance or not."
The features attracting the most votes from the 13 people
who actually bothered to vote in the first round focus on
security and include better protection against cross-site
scripting (five votes) and forgery (five votes). Most
features attracted only three or four votes, which raises
questions about the validity of the exercise and the level of
enthusiasm among developers for AJAX in the first place.
At the same time, the Alliance also published a guide to
AJAX development for mobile
devices. Perhaps it will have more luck in this market.