Cairngorm Talk ( slides & thanks )
It was great to see so many people at the LFPUG yesterday. I hope you found the Cairngorm talk useful - it’s a pretty dry topic so I hope I managed to lighten it up a little. As always, there is sure to be room for improvement, so please feel free to email me directly with your feedback (neil @t nwebb dot co dot uk) . I’d really love to hear what you liked, didn’t like and what you think I could do better.
You can download the presentation slides here and all my Cairngorm blog posts are tagged so they are easy to find ( go to the front page of my blog and click on ‘Cairngorm’ in the Categories section).

Cheers,
Neil
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[...] Neil Webb introduced Cairngorn, an open source architectural framework for Flex. Thankfully colourfully analogised, it’s essentially a complex augmentation of an MVC model. Like I said, being new to Flex it’s specificity gracefully flew over my head but there’s obvious merits in extrapolating processes and good OOP. I’ve recently been working with Drupal so could appreciate it’s granularity - and like Drupal - Webb admitted it excels in some applications but for smaller projects can be overkill. Presentation slides (and blog) can be found here. [...]
Thanks for the presentation, Neil.
Hope to see you presenting again at LFPUG soon.
Yeah thank you bud, and my apologies about the video ;(.
[...] cover this sort of topic in one hour, to a mixed audience. I also saw Neil Webb’s cairngorm presentation last year, although that was probably rather easier for me to follow since I was already using it [...]
[...] Neil Webb introduced Cairngorn, an open source architectural framework for Flex. Thankfully colourfully analogised, it’s essentially a complex augmentation of an MVC model. Like I said, being new to Flex it’s specificity gracefully flew over my head but there’s obvious merits in extrapolating processes and good OOP. I’ve recently been working with Drupal so could appreciate it’s granularity – and like Drupal – Webb admitted it excels in some applications but for smaller projects can be overkill. Presentation slides (and blog) can be found here. [...]