Roger Braunstein

Boxely Goes Public

The Boxely UI Toolkit is finally available to the public! Congratulations go to the whole team.

Boxely is a declarative XML UI toolkit much like Flex. It is the brainchild of Joe Hewitt, the man who brought us FireBug. It was inherited from Joe by a small team at AOL, and through months of hard work they have been making it into their tool of choice for building the next generation of AOL apps. If you have used AIM Triton, you’re running Boxely, and AIM is sitting on your hard drive as a combination of flat files: Box files (like MXML), XML stylesheets (like CSS), javascript behavior scripts (like AS3), and external resources like PNGs. You can author Boxely apps with any editor, and the principles of the language like data binding, styling, behavior attaching, SMIL style animation constructs, and shared libraries of components, are applicable to other XML UI toolkits, so I believe the skills are somewhat interchangeable.

AOL has been developing this tool for its own internal use, but it’s fantastic to see that AOL is giving it away to the public. You should be able to build some pretty cool apps with it in a short time. It seems AOL likes owning their own technologies: .Net and XAML are comparable to the Open Client Platform — which Boxely runs on — and Boxely, yet AOL invested months of hard work into developing their own technologies. I don’t think they’re truly made to compete with other platforms, but perhaps to allow AOL to decide the direction they move in? It will be interesting to see what the development community will make of, and make with, Boxely.

Oh, and I care about all this because I worked on the Boxely team for a few months at AOL. (Too bad my pong demo didn’t make it into the deliverable, ha!) So congrats to all!

4 Responses to “Boxely Goes Public”

  1. Greg Sadetsky » Blog Archive » AOL: bring back Boxely! Says:

    [...] Some reading: Joe Hewitt on Boxely (technical overview), launch announcement here, and here. (Unofficial?) Boxely Community. More on The Technorati and The Google Blog Search. [...]

  2. Roger Braunstein Says:

    Seems like the Boxely launch generated enough buzz that someone in the huge bureaucracy of AOL caught wind of the preview release and decided it didn’t “Align with core business objectives of the stakeholders” or something. Whatever the reason, it’s pulled for now.

  3. John Nicholas Says:

    I am happy to report that after some hiccups last week Boxely is back online and doing just fine. We hope to hear more comments from the development community and see some cool applications written with it.

    And, unfortunately, the pong demo was pulled at the last minute due to copyright concerns.

  4. Roger Braunstein Says:

    Hooray! Thanks for the update, John! I’ll definitely be posting more about Boxely soon.

    LOL at pong hahaha!

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