Virtualization Hosting and Software Development with ColdFusion

December 8th, 2010 Leave a comment Go to comments

Your hosting service may provide more than just web mastering and development or web site maintenance and hosting. The company may also provide software development services if you require solutions that could streamline operations at your company, and it could even do so remotely. This could actually reduce costs in the long term rather than increase them. The overhead involved in housing a bank of servers to contain company data can often be prohibitively expensive. Similar to web servers, this hardware needs to be stored responsibly, often in order to comply with legislation. However, it doesn’t necessarily have to be stored by your company. There are numerous solutions already available to address such issues. Many programming languages have inbuilt functionality that allows them to provide solutions to data storage that can be addressed using web technologies.

ColdFusion is currently an Adobe Systems “product”. It was originally designed with a view to connect HTML pages to a database, but its functionality soon evolved to become a platform in its own right with a scripting language and an IDE (integrated development environment). ColdFusion is an apt name for the platform: It has similar functionality to ASP, JSP and PHP but its language, CFML, is more similar to HTML in terms of its syntax. ColdFusion is employed in data driven intranets and web sites, and it is of use to distributed processes and virtualization hosting services. This is because it is used to deliver remote services such as Flash remoting. It can streamline database management and aid in data retrieval and has various other data management functions. ColdFusion can aid things on the client side by provision of code generation on that side. It also has other uses, such as the conversion of documents into PDFs. It is often regarded as a server side solution to the client side question.

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