ONJava Blog
Sitting in the FindBugs session, it's pretty interesting. The last time I interacted with static analysis it was a product from Parasoft (?) and it wasn't that compelling. FindBugs looks interesting, simple, and is integrated with Hudson. Everyone seems to… read more -- Tim O'Brien
Participated in a Q+A session after yesterday's keynote. Sat down with Neil Young, Larry Johnson, some Sun executives, and a small group of reporters including Tim O'Reilly. Young and Johnson struck me as animated and excited about both the archive… read more -- Tim O'Brien
My entries are a day behind. I'm not a reporter, I'm a blogger, and I think it is more important to spend time talking to people than it is to work to some deadline in the press room. There's a… read more -- Tim O'Brien
So, the big kickoff for JavaOne. I guess there was news. Solaris on EC2, which is fine. More JavaFX demos. Expected that. Other than that, what? So one thing that really struck me: Project Hydrazine. Can someone tell me what… read more -- Robert Cooper
Last year JavaOne got the UN guy and was trying to eradicate poverty; this year they got Neil Young and were showing off the cool stuff. CNET blogger Dan Farber has a good write-up and the video that tells you… read more -- Shashank Tiwari
JavaFX.com is up and running! The problem is that it doesn't work well on most browsers. The small fonts are unreadable when viewed in FireFox or Safari. The site takes a long time to load up. The only thing notable… read more -- Shashank Tiwari
CommunityOne was huge. Having been to various what-use-to-be NetBeans Day at what-used-to-be the Argent, seeing the Moscone filled with people for C1 was actually quite strange. In real terms, the experience didn't seem that different, however. CommunityOne works the big… read more -- Robert Cooper
Although JavaOne 2008 officially starts tomorrow, it commenced today with CommunityOne. Carrying on the trend that started a couple of years back JavaOne is continuing to emerge as an event for things more than just Java. For statistics sake at… read more -- Shashank Tiwari
So I am going to break rules here, I am pretty sure, six ways from Sun-day (haHA!). I am pretty sure I have never commented on this before, because, I agree with the 16,000 of you who will tell me… read more -- Robert Cooper
If you are following JavaOne on Twitter, you should "track javaone". If you haven't already signed up, you should read Bob Lee's Going to JavaOne? Sign up for Twitter blog entry from two days ago. People were using Twitter last… read more -- Tim O'Brien
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Java.net Weblogs
JPC: x86 Emulator on the JVM JPC is an open-source emulator for x86 code. Sweet! ... John D. Mitchell Java One Day 4 Day 4 of Java One is over. Even without huge announcements or great
surprises, it was a great conference. Here are my impressions from the cool
stuff keynote and my takeaway what it all means. ... Cay Horstmann JavaOne - Hits and misses This years JavaOne was a not to be missed event. Here are my views on how the conference has changed. ... Calvin Austin Major themes of JavaOne: REST, Ruby and NetBeans I see themes, three of them, at JavaOne this year: REST, Ruby, and NetBeans ... John O'Conner Be sure to listen to "Live from JavaOne 2008" podcast Daniel Steinberg created an excellent podcast that captures all the important demos and products on the JavaOne pavilion floor related to mobile and embedded Java. Check out "Java Mobility Podcast 45: Live from JavaOne 2008" - highly recommended.
-- Terrence ... Terrence Barr
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After several years away from anything resembling enterprise software, chromatic accepted a challenge from SAP Labs to try their new software development platform. What lessons have they learned from dynamic languages and frameworks? Has developing big serious software truly become more agile? In this second of three articles, chromatic uses SAP NetWeaver Composition Environment to build a bare-bones application from the data model to the UI.
This article is an introduction to Flexive, an open source Java EE 5 application development stack. The authors have extracted a complete application template and describe its use.
After several years away from anything resembling enterprise software, chromatic accepted a challenge from SAP Labs to try their new software development platform. What lessons have they learned from dynamic languages and frameworks? Has developing big serious software truly become more agile? In this first of three articles, chromatic explores the ecosystem around SAP NetWeaver CE and tackles the first challenge -- installation.
Build processes in Java haven't evolved much since the introduction of Ant or Maven. With the ability to use scripting languages like Groovy and JRuby on the JVM, the power of a full language can be brought to bear on the build process. This article discusses Raven, a build system for Java that uses JRuby.
In this article Colin (Chun) Lu discusses some of the complexities facing a large-scale J2EE application and demonstrates a rules-based Java Enterprise Edition auto-deployer using XStream and the JAR Utility API.
S3 is a file storage and serving service offered by Amazon. In this article, Eric Heuveneers demonstrates how to use Amazon S3 via its simple REST API to store and serve your own documents, potentially offloading bandwidth from your own application.
This article introduces a Java-XML binding technique based on VTD-XML and XPath. This approach doesn't mandate a schema, takes advantage of XML's inherent loose encoding, and avoids needless object creation, so it is much more efficient for lightweight data binding.
In this article, Eitan Suez discusses how to use his JMatter framework for rapid development of rich client applications. JMatter is an implementation of the 'Naked Objects' design pattern.
In this article, Anghel Leonard give us a walkthrough of JavaFX Script, the syntax, several examples, and usage within Eclipse and NetBeans.
Using the Eclipse Graphical Modeling Framework (GMF), this article takes the reader through a step-by-step creation of the construction of an application using GMF. Beyond the wizards, get an introduction to GMF 'under the hood.'
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BitTorrent is one of the more popular protocols being used for peer-to-peer file transfers, and enabling your Java applications to use this protocol has never been easier. With a little theory and a lot of working code, this article shows you how to add peer-to-peer protocols to your own apps.
Your data model was near perfect when your application was first written. Since then, it has... evolved. In this article, we will show readers how to upgrade their faulty schemas and data models without affecting existing applications or processes.
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