With the growth of mobile phones, and application development on devices like
Google Android and the Apple iPhone, AJAX adoption will see a big rise. Dave
Meeker, a lead developer with enterprise application provider Roundarch, said
the industry is starting to see real Web browsers on these devices, and a real
Web browser doesn't need a whole lot of power to run and render AJAX. However,
it takes quite a bit of memory and processor to run a Flash or Silverlight
application.
"I think until Adobe and Microsoft catch up with the mobile
stuff, which will take about a year or year-and-a-half, anybody pushing
applications out towards mobile devices is going to go the AJAX route," Meeker
said. "I would assume a corporation will spend 'x' amount of dollars on a new
initiative and if they're gonna build a mobile application, they want a seamless
experience between the mobile application and the regular application. That
means more AJAX adoption because they have to use AJAX on the phone."
As
far as Microsoft and mobile development go, one rumor flying around currently is
a platform called
Kojax,
which was brought to light by Mary-Jo Foley. Kojax will allow Microsoft applets
to run in an Ajax-like way, using a combination of Visual Studio tools and
JavaScript, on Java-based mobile phones. Microsoft did not confirm or deny the
rumor, but Kojax is a name to keep on the backburner.