Peter Coffee

About

Peter Coffee is Director of Platform Research at salesforce.com, where he serves as a liaison with the developer community to define the opportunity and clarify developers' technical requirements on the company's evolving Apex Platform. Peter previously spent 18 years with eWEEK (formerly PC Week), the national news magazine of enterprise technology practice, where he reviewed software development tools and methods and wrote regular columns on emerging technologies and professional community issues.Before he began writing full-time in 1989, Peter spent eleven years in technical and management positions at Exxon and The Aerospace Corporation, including management of the latter company's first desktop computing planning team and applied research in applications of artificial intelligence techniques. He holds an engineering degree from MIT and an MBA from Pepperdine University, he has held teaching appointments in computer science, business analytics and information systems management at Pepperdine, UCLA, and Chapman College.

Microsoft Opens New Studio

Microsoft Opens New Studio The first time you see a dancing bear, youre likely to be impressed that it can dance at all; you probably wont cavil if it steps on its trainers toes once or twice. Microsoft Corp.s Visual Studio .Net, launched last week after what has sometimes seemed an endless wait, dances fairly […]

Letting the User Interrupt

The inexcusable sin of any so-called information technology is failure to pay attention. The 1950s or 1960s model, where jobs get fed to big, dumb beasts that answer when theyre good and ready, must not sneak back into our lives as part of the baggage of distributed services. I recently made the mistake of clicking […]

Microsoft Web Services Tools Invite–And Challenge

The first time you see a dancing bear, youre likely to be impressed that it can dance at all; you probably wont cavil if it steps on its trainers toes once or twice. Microsoft Corp.s Visual Studio .Net, launched today in San Francisco after what has sometimes seemed an endless wait, dances fairly well–and our […]

Tool Set Eases Integration

Tool Set Eases Integration Sybase Inc.s Sybase PowerDesigner 9.0, released last month, does more than any other tool set eWeek Labs has seen to coordinate the definition of business goals, the specification of enterprise systems, and the development of specific database designs and application logic. Developers who fear the overhead of a modeling tool will […]

Geekspeak: February 11, 2002

If anyone wants a candidate for a web service that everyone needs, I propose spell checking. This function demands regular updates, not to mention punctilious debugging. Word 97, for example, still used by many eWeek readers, can be the worst kind of back-seat driver: It interrupts you to give you wrong directions (see screen, right). […]

Wiping the PC Slate Clean

Do you remember the “magic slate” devices that you probably used as a child? A translucent sheet, attached to a black, waxy background, with a stylus that made lines by pressing the top sheet against that foundation? When you pulled up the sheet, whatever you had written or drawn disappeared. When I recently wrote about […]

Visual Studio .Net/BizTalk Combo May Tame Web

Microsoft Corp.s Visual Studio .Net, making its formal debut this week, is a good news/bad news proposition for app developers. The good news, as well discuss in a review next week, is that Visual Studio .Net provides impressively transparent facilities for creating and deploying Web services. Even better are the new language-level facilities—such as structured […]

A Penny for E-Biz Thoughts

Ive often predicted that Amazon.com would never turn a profit. Ill continue to say that the company will never yield a competitive return, but Im not going to hedge: I said that it would never make money, and I was wrong. Never mind that a penny per share puts Amazon at an annualized price/ earnings […]

Tools for the New Terrain

Prepare for a year in which application development tools demand your most careful attention. The opportunities and challenges of building and buying Web services are nearing the tip-over point: Anything else that you do this year will merely maintain your museum of how you used to be competitive. Development tools dont evolve in a steady, […]

Combining Ideas on Resource Allocation

Many readers shared their reactions to last weeks epistle on the need for more restraint in resource use by applications. Comments fell into three distinct groups. First, and most reproving, were the reminders I received about the proper role of the operating system. As I told reader Lou Solomon, Senior Technical Manager at Intercounty Clearance […]