by Judith Dinowitz, Editor-in-Chief
Adobe has offered to work with the Zend Framework to include support for AMF (Action Message Format), as detailed by Andi Gutman on his blog. This will allow for better connections between Zend and Flash-based technologies. The PHP guys that posted comments on Andi's blog seem excited about it, too.
AMF is already available for the CakePHP Framework, using Emanuele's AMFExt for PHP. Find out more at https://trac.cakefoundation.org/amf/.
Dojo, an open-source JavaScript toolkit, is designed to provide "a well conceived API and set of tools for assisting and fixing the issues experienced in everyday web development"
. As of Dojo Toolkit 1.1.0 Beta 1, Dojo-based applications will now run successfully in Adobe AIR's secure application sandbox. You can find more about Dojo and the Adobe AIR support on their website (http://dojotoolkit.org/air and http://www.dojotoolkit.org/book/book-dojo/part-4-testing-tuning-and-debugging/alternative-host-environments-adobe-air).
Kaspersky Labs have reported a new worm in the wild that attacks Facebook and MySpace users. It uses the Flash Player as an excuse to get victims to download the worm, by pretending that the worm is a new version of the Flash Player. Here's how it works:
Basically, the worm uses the trust that social networks have generated among their users, and the ubiquity of the Flash player, to lure the victim into becoming part of a worm network – something you don't ever want to be part of.
So please remember one of the basic rules of internet security. If you get a message from anyone or anything, and you are not expecting it, and it prompts you to download anything, ask your friend if they sent it! Do not automatically download files, even if they claim to be new versions of the Flash Player, whoever you think sent them.
You can read all about this at the Kaspersky site.
Judith Dinowitz is the Editor-in-Chief of the House of Fusion magazines and journals, where she enjoys serving up ColdFusion and Flex goodness on a weekly and quarterly basis.