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  Monday, January 26, 2004 

Mindreef's SOAPscope 3.0

camtasia Here's a four-minute Flash movie containing three segments from an online demo of the latest version of Mindreef's SOAPscope. The presenter is Frank Grossman; a few others (including me) chime in occasionally. The segments are:

  1. How SOAPscope integrates with the WS-I (Web Services Interoperability Organization) test tools.

  2. How to invoke a WSDL service -- in this case, Microsoft's TerraService -- using SOAPscope to visualize inputs and outputs as pseudocode, and optionally modify and replay messages. You can try this yourself at XMethods.net, but the earlier version 2.0 of SOAPscope that's running there isn't as clever about converting enumerated types in the schema into picklists on the invocation form.

  3. How SOAPscope 3.0 integrates with Visual Studio.NET.

Thanks to the Mindreef guys for playing along with this experiment, and to TechSmith for letting me test-drive Camtasia Studio. If folks think these off-the-cuff videos are useful, I'll try to do more of them. I'm involved in a lot of online demos, and showcasing them in this way is probably win/win both for the companies who present to me and for the readers of this blog.

Update: Just as I was noticing a playback problem, Frank Grossman wrote to report the same thing. Camtasia uses a secondary .SWF file, launched from this HTML, to control playback. Evidently, the idea is to make sure the movie plays at the correct screen size. But what I found, as did Frank, is that after the first time through, progressive playback of the video doesn't work on subsequent playbacks. So now I'm pointing directly at the primary .SWF file which, if you're running at greater than 1024x768 (the resolution of the demo) should work fine. If you're running at 1024x768, though, you'll want to use F11 to maximize the Flash player.

 

The art and science of software testing

Test-driven development does require a lot of time and effort, which means something's got to give. One Java developer, Sue Spielman, sent a Dear John letter to her debugger by way of her Weblog. "It seems over the last year or two we are spending less and less time with each other," she wrote. "How should I tell you this? My time is now spent with my test cases."

Clearly that's a better use of time, but when up to half of the output of a full-blown TDD-style project can be test code, we're going to want to find ways to automate and streamline the effort. Agitar Software's forthcoming Java analyzer, Agitator, which was demonstrated to me recently and is due out this quarter, takes on that challenge. [Full story at InfoWorld.com]

 

Next-generation e-forms

E-forms, a technology that's been around for a long time, is now a hotbed of activity. Microsoft's XML-oriented InfoPath, which shipped with Office 2003 in October, is now deployed and in use. Adobe plans to ship a beta version of its PDF-and-XML-oriented forms designer in the first quarter of this year. And e-forms veterans such as PureEdge and Cardiff, whose offerings are built on an XML core, are lining up behind XForms, the e-forms standard that became an official W3C recommendation in October 2003. [Full story at InfoWorld.com]

 


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