PHP 5.4 and Zend Framework 2.0 Coming 2012

Author: Sean Michael Kerner  (Internet News)

It has been more than two years since the last major release of PHP, with PHP 5.3 debuting in June of 2009, which means it’s almost time for a new major release.

PHP 5.4 is currently in beta and will make multiple improvements over the current PHP 5.3 release.

“There are a lot of improvements in PHP 5.4, especially around performance and memory use,” quoted Andi Gutmans, CEO of Zend. “The fact that we’ve given it the beta name, it means the product is already pretty complete. The community feels good about what’s in there.”

In 2010, Gutmans said that PHP 5.4 would lower PHP’s memory footprint by as much as 35 percent. In PHP 5.4, developers will also be able to turn the MB string on and off, so the multibyte support will be available without having to recompile PHP. According to Gutmans, that will provide a significant advantage to companies that want to have a common build.

From a security point of view, Gutmans noted that Magic Quotes, which in the past has been considered to be a security concern, will reach end-of-life in PHP 5.4.

In PHP 5.3, the most significant new feature was the introduction of namespace support, which is a way to encapsulate classes and other PHP items. The namespace support was a big change for developers, but there likely isn’t going to be the same type of big ticket item in the PHP 5.4 release.

“With PHP 5.3, if you want to take advantage of the namespace support, it essentially mandated a rewrite, or at least substantial changes,” quoted Zeev Suraski, CTO of Zend. “PHP 5.4 will be more evolutionary than PHP 5.3, so it won’t mandate a rewrite of code.”

Zend Framework 2.0

The Zend Framework, which currently is in beta, is also set for a 2.0 release in 2012. Gutmans noted that his team has worked to make the Zend Framework (ZF) 2.0 release faster and more extensible.

According to Suraski, the main focus of Zend Framework 2.0 is to take full advantage of PHP 5.3 as well as making it easier to use.

“Developing applications in ZF 2.0 will be significantly easier than ZF 1.0,” Suraski said. “You can create an application with just a few lines of code in a really elegant way.”

Suraski added that Zend Framework in general is something that will help PHP developers to build more secure applications as well.

“Generally speaking, if you take advantage of Zend Framework, then a lot of the common issues that you get in applications just go away,” Suraski said. “For example, if you use the database component instead of creating your own queries, then SQL injection goes away.”

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Zend Debuts PHPcloud

Author: Sean Michael Kerner (Internet News)

PHP was the core language of the 1.0 era of the web, bringing scripting to the emerging Internet. PHP vendor Zend now wants PHP to be the language for the cloud and today announced a new service to do just that.

The PHPcloud.com service is built on top of Amazon and provides developers with an application platform. The developer cloud component provides developers with a PHP sandbox for apps that provides code tracing to help improve applications.

“We believe that that cloud enables us to deliver a significant step up in developer productivity,” Andi Gutmans, CEO of Zend told InternetNews.com.

The developer cloud integrates with the Zend Studio 9 IDE, which is now in beta, as well as the Eclipse PDT (PHP developer tools) project. Gutmans noted that there is going to be an open source SDK that will enable other IDE projects and vendors to connect to the php developer cloud as well.

The code tracing feature in the developer cloud can be accessed via a browser toolbar. The toolbar shows developers if something has gone wrong on their php server instance from an application coding perspective.

“Our goal is to provide an innovative and through experience for the development paradigm,” Gutmans said.

From a collaboration perspective, the php cloud provides the ability to take snapshots of their application sandbox. The snapshot captures source code, database configuration and schema. The snapshot can then be shared with others that can then import the snapshot to their own environments.

The new Zend Application Fabric, which is also being announced today, will enable developers to easily move their application to whatever cloud deployment they choose.

“The underlying fabric is consistent between the developer cloud and whatever production cloud you’re running on,” Gutmans said. “So if you’re building and testing your application in a development environment, you know that it will run exactly the same way in production.”

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What Is The Most secure Browser?

Author: Sean Michael Kerner (eSecurity Planet)

For as long as there has been more than one browser, users have been asking which browser is more secure. Answering the question has often led to an evaluation of publicly disclosed vulnerabilities and determining how long it takes a browser vendor or organization, to patch.

According to a pair of security researchers from Accuvant Labs speaking at the SecTOR security conference in Toronto this week, there needs to be a more holistic and thorough view of browsers to fully understand security risks. Continue reading

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This blog is now personally managed

Due to the fact that the company that owned this blog has passed on early this year and no longer in business (*salute*…sad face), I was able to acquire this blog and claimed it as my own! At the moment it is not affiliated with any company or organization, and no it’s not for sale.

It shall be built into something grand one day so don’t run away, it will be built piece by piece and a new design and everything will be coming soon. I liked its old design but apparently I’m not allowed to use it since I was never affiliated with the previous company and since their not around any more, I can’t ask them for the rights. Patience is a virtue…meanwhile I will attempt to keep the posts up when  I can. I will also throw this message on the about page as well so everyone knows what happened.

I will keep all the old posts, so nothing will be lost (so no worries, I got this!!).

 

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Client Focus: Wallpapers for Windows Phone 7 Devices

Recently we shed light on a project where we had created a series of Transparent wallpapers for Windows Phone 7 devices for a client. Today we would like to touch back on the subject as there has been so many changes.

In today’s Client Focus we are showcasing once again some images created for one of our clients (Animevortex.net). These wallpaper images are for the new Windows Phone 7 OS phones and they now come in both regular and transparent format.

 

Regular Wallpapers: Windows Phone 7 Wallpaper Gallery | TheSa|nt’s Blog

Transparent Wallpapers
Free Transparent Wallpapers for Windows Phone 7 (WP7)

 

We have a vast number of clients who come to us for design requests such as these, as well as forum graphics, user graphics, avatars, sigs and much more. For more information and to see some more of our work, please visit our portfolio section. You can find a link at the top right corner of the page.

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Client Focus: Transparent Wallpapers for Windows Phone 7

In today’s Client Focus we are showcasing some images created for one of our clients (Animevortex.net). These wallpaper images are for the new Windows Phone 7 OS phones and have transparent backgrounds so that it reveals the phone’s home screen as the user begins to slide them.

This is currently an active project still so more images will come in the future. These wallpapers are free to download and you can find them via the following link along with instructions on how to set them on your Windows Phone 7 device..

WallpapersFree Transparent Wallpapers for Windows Phone 7 (WP7)

 

We have a vast number of clients who come to us for design requests such as these, as well as forum graphics, user graphics, avatars, sigs and much more. For more information and to see some more of our work, please visit our portfolio section. You can find a link at the top right corner of the page.

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ProAudio for High Performance Home Theater Has Been Launched

I am excited to point out the public launch of ProAudio.

ProAudio specializes in home installation and modifications of high-performance audio systems in the greater Las Vegas area.

ProAudo’s goal is to bring professional sound to the living room or personal theater that compares to or surpasses public theaters.

They are a solid company that offers a vast knowledge of audio that surpasses anything you could buy at your local Best Buy (or alternative electronics store). They can introduce your ears to a level of sound you may have never knew you could have in your own living room.

For more information about ProAudio, visit http://www.thundermod.net

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Microsoft will launch Internet Explorer 9 at SXSWi

Author: Caroline McCarthy (cNet)

Microsoft will be formally launching the next version of its Internet Explorer browser, IE9, at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival (SXSWi) on Monday–an interesting place to launch, given that the Austin, Texas, geek fest is packed full of the hordes who have long since ditched Internet Explorer for the decidedly hipper pastures of Firefox, Safari, or Chrome.

The new browser, which had its first and only release candidate land in users’ hands in early February, will fully launch to the public at 9 Pacific time that night. In a blog post, Internet Explorer senior director Ryan Gavin described the browser as offering up “a more beautiful web.”

On its release day, Microsoft is having a press briefing where Gavin said there are still “a few surprises left.” Later that night, Microsoft will be throwing a party in Austin in celebration of the new browser, with hipster-friendly rock act Yeasayer headlining the event.

Among the new features in IE9 is a refreshed look with the browser taking up less space than previous versions of IE, as well as a way to pin sites to the Windows task bar. Sites can then program their pages to act more like desktop applications with things like notifications, and the Windows 7 Jump List feature, which can hop users to specific parts of a Web page.

IE9 also brings performance improvements, including faster start times and a new JavaScript engine called Chakra that Microsoft has proven to be faster at the WebKit SunSpider benchmark test than competitors like Chrome, Opera, Firefox, and Safari. On the security side, IE9 also adds support for “do not track” through lists that users can subscribe to, as well as a way to filter ActiveX content from pages.

The new browser continues to be offered only to users of Windows Vista and Windows 7, leaving users of XP–which is the most popular OS at 45.3 percent of Windows users (according to W3schools)– with IE8.

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Google Chome 10 Gains Spotlight Due to Faster JavaScript

Author: Stephen Shankland (cNet)

Google released Chrome 10, endowing its browser with faster JavaScript, password synchronization, a revamped preferences system–but no new Chrome logo. Chrome is available for Windows, Mac, and Linux.

Google announced Chrome 10‘s stable release on its blog but refrained from mentioning its product number. That’s in line with the company’s effort to focus on features rather than version numbers, which it calls mere milestones. Google tries to get new versions into users’ hands as rapidly as possible and currently passes a new milestone about once every six weeks.

JavaScript is the programming language used to write Web-based programs, and it’s steadily gaining in importance. That’s because programmers are now using it to write full-featured Web applications such as Gmail and Google Docs, not just Web pages, and faster JavaScript enables more features and a faster interface.

Chrome 10 comes with the “Crankshaft” version of the V8 browser engine that Google pegs as 66 percent faster than the unnamed version in Chrome 9 as measured with Google’s V8 Benchmark suite. That’s a major speed boost, but be aware there are many other attributes of browser performance, and one of the biggest–hardware acceleration–will hit prime time with the imminent release of Mozilla’s Firefox 4 and Microsoft’s IE9.

Chrome 10 gets some hardware acceleration, though, when it comes to playing videos, said Chrome team member Jason Kersey in a blog post.

Browsers usually get new features, but, unusually, Chrome had one removed: H.264 video is gone. Google said Chrome 10 would support Google’s own VP8 video encoding, which it offers royalty-free in an attempt to unencumber Web video from patent licensing barriers that come with the widely used H.264. For those who are attached to the codec, Microsoft offers an H.264 Chrome plug-in for Windows 7 users.

Chrome already had Adobe’s Flash Player built in, but Chrome 10 also puts Flash in a protective sandbox to confine security problems to a walled-off area of memory. Also in the security department are 23 security fixes discovered through Google’s Chrome bounty program and ranging in severity from low to high.

One seemingly minor but actually pretty useful change in Chrome 10 is a revamped configuration system. Instead of a pop-up dialog box that must be dealt with then closed, the new settings show in a browser tab.

The first advantage of the approach is that there’s more room to show what’s going on. The second is that you can leave the settings open while using other tabs–for example while reading Web sites that are offering advice on what to do. A third is that you can save specific Web addresses for a configuration setting, which Google believes could make remote tech support easier because you can simply e-mail somebody a URL rather than tell them how to drill down through a number of settings. Finally, a feature that comes along for the ride is that the configuration page comes with a search box to locate particular features directly.

Update: Added information about Chrome 10 supporting VP8 video encoding and putting Flash in a protective sandbox. Added information about Chrome 10′s hardware acceleration for video and security fixes and about Microsoft’s H.264 plug-in.

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Google search to reward high-quality sites

Author: Lance Whitney

With the latest changes to its search algorithm, Google is aiming to reward Web sites that offer original, in-depth content at the same time that it penalizes those that simply borrow content from others.

Rolled out this week, the changes will help ensure that sites considered to be of “high quality” will rank higher in Google’s search results, while those deemed of “low quality” will get dumped lower in the ranks, according to a blog posted yesterday by Google fellow Amit Singhal and principal engineer Matt Cutts.

Google is clearly looking to crack down on “content farms,” sites that purposely tailor their pages with content that often makes little to no sense but is loaded with keywords and other information designed solely to generate a huge number of hits.

How does Google figure out which sites are high-quality and which ones aren’t, especially since that sort of determination can be subjective?

Singhal and Cutts explained in general terms that sites with original information, such as research, in-depth reports, and thoughtful analysis would be looked upon more favorably, while those that offer low value-add, that copy content, or “that are just not very useful” would be in the doghouse. And the criteria used to make this determination are part of the new algorithm.

A spokesman for Google told CNET today that the company can’t share the specifics of how the algorithm works because “we don’t want to give bad actors a way to game our algorithms and worsen the experience for our users.”

The company said that the new rankings won’t rely on feedback obtained from its Personal Blocklist, a new Chrome extension that tracks which Web sites are blocked by users and then sends those results to Google. But the company said it did compare the information from the Blocklist with the sites caught by the new algorithm and found that many of them popped up in both places. Specifically, 84 percent of the top dozen domains flagged via the extension have also been caught by the tweaked algorithm.

For now, Google has deployed these changes only in the U.S. but plans to roll them out in other countries over time. The company is also promising further updates that it thinks can further improve its search results.

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