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HELPING TO BUILD COMPANIES AND CAREERS |
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Ken's Notes |
Xerox Makes New Programming Language for Document Transformations Available for 'Test Drive'
Early Adopters Can Try Out Promising Software, Provide Feedback On Emerging Technologies at Xerox-RIT Site
This is among the most recent of eight emerging technologies that have been added to alphaAve.com, which celebrated its first anniversary in November. The site is designed to move research out of labs and into products faster. The new language, called Circus-DTE, is a research project developed at the Xerox Research Centre of Europe in Grenoble, France.
Circus-DTE is designed for a world where document portals are everywhere and documents and data must move from one to another on the Web or in business processes, so-called "document transformations."
Until now, there was no middle ground for document transformations between a general-purpose, low-level language that required lengthy development of complex algorithms and a high-level, but inflexible approach. Circus-DTE answers that need. A specialized programming language, it is particularly suited to data processing or the transformation of structured documents, and it automatically validates the results produced so that input into another application is sure to function properly. Circus-DTE instantly translates the document so it can be viewed from a PDA, mobile phone or laptop with a variety of applications.
XRCE scientists believe that Circus-DTE could be especially useful when there are multiple document transformations, such as document content processing, Internet publishing, publishing on handheld devices and database-to-XML conversions. For example, processing a customer order requires a series of transformations -- data must be input into applications that check inventory and availability, that prepare shipping documentation, that generate an invoice, that process payments and perhaps even publish to the Web so a customer can track progress online.
"AlphaAve seems to be meeting a need in the developer community for access to emerging technologies that can be adapted to their own applications," said Robert Campbell, who coordinates Xerox's participation in the site. "The software posted has already been downloaded more than 5,000 times, with interest coming from universities, private companies, individuals and government organizations."
RIT uploaded its first technology last June - a "middleware toolkit" to enable networking between mobile wireless devices, noted Jeffrey Lasky, director of RIT's Laboratory for Applied Computing, which maintains the site. "The RIT application is another example of how alphaAve will help organizations find technologies they need without the heavy R&D costs," he adds.
Since alphaAve was first launched in November 2001 with six technologies, Xerox laboratories have added additional technologies:
Software developers and programmers wishing to check out Circus-DTE or any of the other technologies can download them from www.alphaAve.com. The site is the first to offer experimental software from both commercial and academic laboratories.
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