There are so many different ways to arrive at the home page for an interesting project here on Java.net. To help you find the project you are looking for you can list the projects alphabetically or by community, or peruse incubating projects or those that have been archived. In addition you can search all projects for a specific project name. We are particularly proud of those projects that began in our incubator and have matured into successful projects.
This is the public project for JSR 348: Towards a new version of the Java Community Process, the first of two JSRs to modify the JCP's processes. This JSR will focus on relatively simple changes that can be implemented quickly (we hope to finish before October 2011) whereas the second JSR - which will be filed soon - will tackle more complex issues, including any necessary changes to the JSPA.
The London Java Community (LJC), aka the London JUG. We hosting a variety of events (talks, coding dojos, unconferences and more) on a weekly or fortnightly basis. For those interested in the wider ecosystem, we also act as a 'mother ship' for other user groups such as Scala, Clojure, Jboss + others. Most recently we won the open seat on the Java SE/EE Executive Committee and hope to represent Java developer's interests world wide with regards to the JCP and Java standards.
VisualVM - All-in-One Java Troubleshooting Tool. VisualVM is a visual tool integrating several commandline JDK tools and lightweight profiling capabilities. Designed for both production and development time use, it further enhances the capability of monitoring and performance analysis for the Java SE platform.
Code and other recipies for Blu-Ray Java, GEM, MHP and OCAP. Please see https://jovial.com/hdcookbook for a project overview, documentation, and more details.
This project is to create a comprehensive haptics API for the Java Language, this project started with the writing of a Java Binding to the SensAble OpenHaptics API by Ian John Archer (Software Engineer - Birmingham City University User-Lab). The first version of the JTouchToolkit was release OpenSource in Sept of 2007 after a year of in house development by User-Lab. The main aim of this project is to create a Haptics API that takes advantage of the benefits of a mature language such as Java.