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Adam Lehman

Adam Lehman

Adobe

Created:
10 December 2007
User Level:
Beginner
Products:
ColdFusion

Creating engaging applications with ColdFusion 8 for the government

Nearly three years in the making, Adobe ColdFusion 8 is one of the most feature-rich releases in the 12 year history of ColdFusion. Today's government agency application users demand far more than simple HTML web applications: they want secure rich desktop-like applications, personalized multimedia experiences, printable and secure portable content, and more. Join us for a 60-minute session showing you how Adobe ColdFusion 8 delivers these and other engaging application experiences with features like Ajax development support and integration, native .NET and Microsoft Exchange support, and dynamic PDF document and form processing.

Using ColdFusion 8 features in government applications

Figure 1. Using ColdFusion 8 features in government applications

Adobe offers live, in-depth product presentations called eSeminars—technical discussions led by product engineers, technical support engineers, and customer leaders. eSeminar content varies across all Adobe products and technical levels.

Adobe eSeminars are recorded online using Acrobat Connect. There is no charge to participate. While you are viewing, please keep in mind that these presentations were delivered to a live audience.

For a list of upcoming eSeminars, view the eSeminar schedule. For a list of past eSeminars, vist the onDemand page.

About the author

Adam Lehman is the ColdFusion Specialist at Adobe Systems, Incorporated based out of Washington, DC, and has been a ColdFusion developer for over a decade. Prior to joining Adobe, Adam was the Senior Web Engineer for the U.S. Department of State, where he managed a team of developers, architected enterprise ColdFusion-based applications, and founded and managed the Department of State Adobe Developer User Group for over two years. His background also includes several years designing and programming e-learning applications for Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.