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discuss Java and .NET interoperability. The discussion is led by software expert Ted Neward [at left].
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Today's most useful selection of blogs, chosen from over a thousand sources.
Today's most useful selection of blogs, chosen from over a thousand sources.
Today's most useful selection of blogs, chosen from over a thousand sources.
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Blog Archive
Blog Archive
Blog Archive
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One thing is clear, modularity is a desirable trait for enterprise Java applications. What is still being contested though is how to achieve it. This entry contains various posts on the latest debates in and around Java modualarity.
Recently, two of most popular IDEs in the Java marketplace hit major milestones. Eclipse in its 3.5 version and NetBeans in its 6.7 version. This entry contains various posts from around the blogsphere on these releases.
With the proposed final draft for the EJB 3.1 specification recently released, its now even clearer what can be expected from this technology in its final implementation. These two posts by Ken Saks and Adam Bien discuss the latest on EJB 3.1
Executable JARs provide a helpful means for application execution, but as this post by Kyle Burton points out, executable JARs for Clojure -- the JVM-compatible language -- have a series of issues you need to be aware of.
Certification can prove to be an important filter in assessing anyone's skills. In this entry, Cay Horstmann's post first explains the importance of certification with the prevalence and easy access to answers in search engines. And in a second post, Felipe Gaucho discusses how Sun's certification memory tests will be replaced by real coding certification.
In this post by Heiko Seeberger, he explores how to take advantage of OSGi in the context of Scala, levarging Scala's REPL (the interactive Scala console).
Volatile is perhaps one of the most underused Java keywords in the language, given its usage in special threading cases and often times scant documentation. In this post Jeremy Manson explores the implication of the volatile keyword in arrays.
There are various ways to go about concurrency in Java and as this post by Gary Boone reminds us, doing it with shared-state is often considered hard. His post includes reference to Jonas Boner's JavaOne talk 'Alternative Concurrency Paradigms For The JVM'.
An new meme seems to have emerged in the blogsphere related to modularity and Java's classpath: 'Classpath hell just froze over' in reference to how Java's classpath issues will be solved by modularity projects like Jigsaw and OSGi. This post includes coverage on Project Jigsaw, OSGi and related standards in this same space.
Two Java standards related to dependency injection made headlines recently. One on JSR-330 which standardizes dependency injection annotations for Java SE and the other on JSR-299 related to contexts and dependency injection. These two posts, one by Gavin King and the other by Alex Miller, describe the latest in these two standards.
Concurrency continues to be a popular topic with the growing popularity of multi-core processors. In this post, Franco Travostino describes how even though concurrency is an old topic, cores have 'raised the bar'. It includes references to the recent JavaOne talk entitled 'Robust and Scalable Concurrent Programming: Lessons from the Trenches'.
Flex has become a popular companion for server-side Java projects, providing sharper user interfaces often dubbed RIA(Rich Internet Applications). In this post, Flex expert Jon Rose takes a look at frameworks in this space and how they aid in building Flex/Java applications.
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The editors of TheServerSide.com browse hundres of blogs each day to bring you the information you need without the noise of the blogsphere. If you have a blog you think we should be reading, notify us of the blog.
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Dmitri Maximovich has written a blog on optimizing CMP EJB performance in WebLogic, by addressing optimistic concurrency, along with some of the implications of doing so.
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Brian McCallister looks at the Lucene search engine and shows us how to index and retrieve objects from a sample Student application.
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Cedric Beust has been in a position to actually code with JDK 5 for over six months. He has written up his thoughts on the new features, and how he has found them to be in practice.
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Mike Clark has started a series of entries of letters that you wish you could write to your boss. It consists of concepts which seem so obvious to us, but which the bosses don't get.
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Brian McCallister has been playing with JDO 2 fetch groups, ZODB, thinking about TranQL, playing with Prevayler, and looking at TORPEDO.
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Frank talks about fear and how it can derail efforts to find and solve scalability and performance problems. He has seen a lot of fear on his various engagements, and here he talks about why, and how.
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Brian McCallister has kindly rambled on about IoC, and design in web applications. He discusses what has worked well for him (and others) in the last year.
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Matt Raible went to the Denver JUG meeting with Neal Gafter, and Joshua Bloch. They discussed the new features of Java 5, and Matt details the features, and when to use them.
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