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By Mark Phillips, Omnis Product
Manager
The North American Omnis Conference, AmerOmnis by
name, concluded on March 19 and was by all accounts
a great success. The venue, service and accommodations
were excellent. Following in the European tradition,
the conference was convivial, technically intense
and virtually free of sales pitches. It was a great
compliment to have some of the most active and technically
astute developers in the Americas involved, not to
mention several from Europe and Southeast Asia. There
were many new faces, including some Pick developers,
not to mention a few old ones who are new to the AmerOmnis
conference.
A seasoned developer wrote to the Omnis List "The
sessions were very good and the presenters were all
very enthusiastic in their presentation." Sessions
covered SQL, Omnis 7 to Omnis Studio conversion, externals
and components; all were presented by developers active
in the trade. IBM, Frontbase and Openbase offered
interesting and useful sessions, taking full advantage
of the opportunity to meet the developers. David Swain's
Omnis Studio 101 track was well attended and continues
as a perennial favorite. Computer Dynamics gave fascinating
sessions on the use of XML, Web Services and .NET,
successfully presenting complex topics in a simple
manner. The web deployment sessions offered by Fred
Haislmaier and Caroline Wilkins, Phd., stimulated
a lot of discussion in the halls about internet based
applications.
The conference organizers continue to improve the
conferences, and this one is no exception. This year
added a session on business practices first presented
at the OzOmnis conference. David Ferri and David Lewis
offered a great deal of information about the software
business. In addition, new sessions such as Dan Rittinger's
"Transaction Modeling" session and a session
on application modeling using the Unified Modeling
Language (UML) offered Omnis developers a look at
system design techniques.
Gwyneth Gibbs, VP of European Operations for Raining
Data, presented the overview of the Omnis Studio product
and Raining Data. The preview of Omnis Studio v4 was
very well received. In particular, demonstrations
of the new browser interface, custom folders for code
segments and enhanced support for non-visual Java
classes were met with applause and enthusiasm. The
SAP initiative announced at CeBIT was mentioned in
the presentation, and generated many positive comments.
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