ONJava Blog
Its about 6.30PM here in Prague and the day 1 of The Server Side Java Symposium (TSSJS) is wrapping up for the day with an award ceremony (sponsored by GigaSpaces). I am too tired and sleepy to carry on after… read more -- Shashank Tiwari
Tom Baeyens (jBPM / JBoss workflow project lead) has a good post on the jBPM (JBoss workflow) community day held at the Guinness brewery in Dublin. Warning - slides may contain pictures of people drinking beer. In case you missed… read more -- Paul Browne
Vincent Pardington has a good post up on DZone beginning an SOA pitfalls series. His first post, on NIH in the SOA world is a good one, but I think misses one important point: First of all, the idea of… read more -- Robert Cooper
So this has made the rounds on /. I will say this about UML: some of us are visual people. As the token Left-Handed guy in the software world, I admit, I see the world in somewhat visual terms. I… read more -- Robert Cooper
NASA's using Java to map the location of the more recent Mars lander and to provide a useful tool for translating between Martian time and Earth time. -- Tim O'Brien
Stumble upon this blog post via Google Reader today, and I don't think it has received much attention. Michael Podrazik wrote about his prediction that Java will be the next Google App Engine Language. Quoting from Michael's prediction: Steve Yegge… read more -- Tim O'Brien
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
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Java.net Weblogs
Manila; Moderation done right; Breadcrumbs for NetBeans Geertjan and I just finished a week doing NetBeans Certified Training in Manila - great, minus the typhoon; my friend Karel figured out the right way to handle forum moderation 9 years ago and the world still hasn't caught on; there's a cool new module for NetBens on the plugin portal ... Tim Boudreau Quick update to GlassFish gem: GlassFish gem 0.3.1 Released As it happens sometimes, right after GlassFish 0.3.0 release we found a critical regression that happened due to the fact that Rails grizzly adapter was re-written and this regression was introduced in that process. It is fixed and updated... ... Vivek Pandey New Address How many weblogs does one person need? ... Gregg Sporar Writing a (bit complex) Glassfish Update Module Creating a program that works with the Glassfish update center isn't especially hard, but it isn't very well documented. This blog is an attempt to remedy that.
I just finished writing a Glassfish update center module. While simple examples have already been blogged about, this one is a little mo ... Jim Driscoll JXLayer 3.0 - MouseScrollableUI Implementing auto-scrolling feature with JXLayer ... Alexander Potochkin
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Java Related Books
GIS for Web Developers – Adding 'Where' to Your Web Applications
By Scott Davis
176 pages
$34.95 USD
GIS for Web Developers introduces Geographic Information Systems (GIS) in simple terms and demonstrates hands-on uses. With this book, you'll explore popular websites mapquest.com and Google Maps, see the technologies they use, and learn how to create your own. Written with the usual Pragmatic Bookshelf humor and real-world experience, GIS for Web Developers makes geographic programming concepts accessible to the common developer.
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New Features
My previous two articles covered my experiences with installing, configuring, and building a very small application with SAP NetWeaver Composition Environment (see Does Enterprise Development Have to Be Painful, part one and Does Enterprise Development Have to be Painful, part two). This article discusses bundling and deploying that application, as well as my thoughts on the entire process.
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.'
Turn Over a New Leaf

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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.
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