- Mobile applications development
- Visual development of web application
- Service Oriented Architecture and Composite Applications with BPEL
- C/C++ applications
- Profiling
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NetBeans: The Complete Overview (3 messages)
- Posted by: Regina Lynch
- Posted on: October 31 2006 13:29 EST
Known as the original free Java IDE, NetBeans is an open source project dedicated to providing solid software development that addresses the needs of developers, users and businesses. In this complete overview by NetBeans Architect Pavel Buzek, listen to how Java EE 5 simplifies development and NetBeans adds more ease of use with code completion for database mapping, wizards building complete applications from existing data, and editing annotations. NetBeans is more than just a Java IDE; extension packs offer additional features:Threaded Messages (3)
- Re: NetBeans: The Complete Overview by jelmer kuperus on October 31 2006 18:29 EST
- Re: NetBeans: The Complete Overview by Joseph Ottinger on November 01 2006 10:01 EST
- NetBeans supports BPEL by glen woods on October 31 2006 20:32 EST
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Re: NetBeans: The Complete Overview[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: jelmer kuperus
- Posted on: October 31 2006 18:29 EST
- in response to Regina Lynch
In this tech talk, sponsored by Sun Microsystems
Does this mean joseph ottinger is leaving again ? :) http://epesh.blog-city.com/why_i_resigned_from_jdj.htm -
Re: NetBeans: The Complete Overview[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: Joseph Ottinger
- Posted on: November 01 2006 10:01 EST
- in response to jelmer kuperus
No. I conducted the interview. I left JDJ because the publisher was making the magazine take a stand against BEA, without even letting me do anything about it. TSS has none of that sort of problem. I try to post what's relevant, without regard to whose news it is. At JDJ, the magazine would have taken a specific slant and pushed it, without editorial agreement or knowledge. This is nothing against Sys-Con - only how I saw it and what drove my resignation. JDJ is a decent magazine. I think TSS is better, of course, but hey...In this tech talk, sponsored by Sun Microsystems
Does this mean joseph ottinger is leaving again ? :)
http://epesh.blog-city.com/why_i_resigned_from_jdj.htm -
NetBeans supports BPEL[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: glen woods
- Posted on: October 31 2006 20:32 EST
- in response to Regina Lynch
The feature that make me surprised is that NetBeans supports the standard BPEL 2.0. Both IEDA and eclipse don't support it Tutorials