XMLSPY2004 and
MAPFORCE2004 By Vijay Phagura If you are an enterprise
or XML developer and wish
you had a tool that could
make your life easier,
check out this review as
it discusses two of the
most useful tools in the
industry. Jan. 8, 2004 12:00 AM Reads: 14,907 |
JavaPolis 2003: An
Impression By Ronny Van de Maele A first-hand report from
what the organizers call
'by far the biggest
conference for Java
people in Europe.' Dec. 9, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,443 |
JavaPolis2003 By Kirk Pepperdine Kirk Pepperdine spent the
last few days in Antwerp
at the BeJUG's (Belgium
Java Users Group) second
offering of JavaPolis.
Learn how he got on. Dec. 8, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 13,080 Replies: 3 |
Teamstudio Analyzer for
Java By Maxim Chpakov What is every Java
developer's nightmare?
Maintaining code, even if
he or she has written it.
Code is often chaotic and
incomprehensible, mostly
due to nonuniform coding
styles. Dec. 4, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 11,326 |
XML Tunneling Technology By Robert Carten At WinWin Solutions we
build custom business
applications for
insurance, health care,
and financial vertical
markets. Dec. 4, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 15,733 Replies: 1 |
QuickServer By Alan Williamson JDJ's Editor-in-Chief
Alan Williamson was faced
with having to build an
IMAP server. Just as he
was about to start
getting into Sockets,
Writers and Readers he
happened upon a jewel
lurking within the pile
of open-source. Discover
of what he found. Nov. 28, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 13,044 Replies: 2 |
A Java Weekend in
Washington By Alan Williamson JDJ's Editor-in-Chief
Alan Williamson finally
had to find out what all
the fuss was about. He
accepted the invitation
and headed down to
Washington to witness and
participate in his first
NoFluffJustStuff
symposium focusing on
Java. Find out how he
got on. Nov. 10, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 7,383 Replies: 2 |
WebLogic JRockit 8.1 by
BEA Systems By Kirk Pepperdine The JRockit engineers
made two assumptions when
they first designed
JRockit. First, server
VMs run for a long time
and, second, memory is
cheap and plentiful. Nov. 3, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 32,660 |
Aligo Omni Mobile
Platform By Jim Milbery Way back in the November
2001 issue of JDJ (Vol.
6, issue 11), I took a
look at Aligo's M-1
Mobile Application
Server. Back then, the
technology market was
still in the heady
'bubble' days and
wireless was the next big
frontier. Fast-forward to
mid-2003 and here we are
wallowing in the throes
of an extended technology
slump. However, wireless
applications are still a
part of the next big
frontier, and the team at
Aligo has been hard at
work updating their
software. I recently had
the chance to get my
hands dirty with the
latest, forthcoming
release of the Aligo Omni
Mobile Platform. Sep. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 13,400 |
A Well-Rounded Package in
Juliet By Alan Williamson It was at the end of day
3 at JavaOne and I was
tired. I was tired of
product pitches, tired of
talking, and tired of
listening to all the
hype. But Juliet caught
his attention. Aug. 4, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 9,949 Replies: 3 |
Caché 5 By Mathias Kühn One of the key challenges
facing Java developers is
that their
object-oriented
applications use data
stored in relational
databases. The result:
time- and cost-intensive
mapping between the two
paradigms. InterSystems'
Corporation develops and
markets a post-relational
database management
system called Cache
that's designed to
address this challenge by
eliminating the impedance
mismatch between objects
and tables. Aug. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 11,589 |
ExtenXLS Java/XLS Toolkit
2.1 by Extentech Inc. By Peter Curran For the business people
of the world, Excel is
like mother's milk. I'm
convinced that my
neighbor, a financial
planner for an investment
bank, does our
homeowner's
reconciliation for fun: a
showcase for his Excel
prowess. It's a sickness.
Excel is powerful, simple
to use, and ubiquitous in
virtually every market. Jul. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 13,065 Replies: 3 |
P800 by Sony Ericsson By Jason R Briggs This review has,
admittedly, been quite
some time coming. Had I
been looking at basic
phone features, I could
have produced something
months ago - however,
this magazine is not the
mobile phone-geek's
equivalent of the
Trainspotter's Almanac
(fortunately), and we
have slightly more
relevant details to
discuss, such as exactly
how well the P800
performs when running
Java applications - so
the review has taken
considerably more time
than I originally
expected. Jun. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 14,248 Replies: 1 |
Ensemble Glider by
Ensemble Systems By Ron Phillips I work with a lot of J2EE
development tools. While
some feel like solutions
looking for a problem,
every once in a while I
run into one that feels
like it was inspired by a
developer's frustration
at not being able to work
quickly and effectively.
Ensemble Glider from
Ensemble Systems is that
sort of tool. Jun. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 10,296 |
ObjectAssembler 2.5
Enterprise Edition by
ObjectVenture, Inc. By Adam Chace Recently, I had the
opportunity to work with
the latest version of
Object-Venture's J2EE
development tool:
ObjectAssembler.
ObjectVenture promotes
ObjectAssembler 2.5 as a
'smart' development tool
that simplifies and
accelerates J2EE
development. This is a
popular claim among Java
tools, so I decided to
put it to the test. My
experience showed that
ObjectAssembler lives up
to the challenge. Jun. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 11,556 |
InstallAnywhere 5
Enterprise Edition
by Zero G Software, Inc. By Jason Brown Creating cross-platform
applications has always
been a challenge. Java
can insulate us from much
of the hassle during
application development,
but often the particulars
of each platform become
painfully acute when
distributing the
application to a host of
varied platforms. Most
commercial installer
programs support only one
platform, which leads
developers to support
multiple installers on
multiple platforms (using
multiple products from
multiple vendors). May. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 15,658 |
FirstSQL/J Professional
v2.0
by FirstSQL By Paul Gifford Pop quiz: you're writing
a standalone
cross-platform
application that needs to
handle a large number of
data files. The data may
be disparate in type but
it has some qualities in
common. You want the user
to be able to browse or
search the data and, of
course, you want your
application to be
responsive. May. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 10,143 |
Tifosi 2002 Enterprise
Integrator
by Fiorano
Software By Laurent Michalkovic Java started as a simple
programming language with
a rather comprehensive
runtime library. To
penetrate the enterprise
world, Sun then created
the J2EE specification
and, consequently, their
application server. Apr. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 12,856 |
Conquer-IT! J2EE
by Trans-World Resources,
LLC By Tim Rondeau; Duncan Murphy There are seemingly
countless self-paced J2EE
computer- and Web-based
training tools on the
market today, and many
are of questionable
value. However,
Conquer-IT! J2EE Part 1:
JSPs and Servlets stands
out from the crowd,
focusing on the key
skills developers require
and giving users a chance
to work with an actual
application server, real
code, and associated
build procedures - very
different from standard
multimedia simulators
found in most
computer-based training
products. Apr. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 10,630 |
Show Reviews By Steven Berkowitz; Joey Gibson On November 7, 2002,
Chutney Technologies
sponsored a small
get-together at New York
City's Marriott Financial
Center. When Alan
forwarded the invite to
me, my first thought was,
'Goodie. Nothing about
Web services.' Mar. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 10,657 |
SOFIA By Joe Grimes We work in the IT
services department of a
large insurance company
and were asked to rewrite
an old PC-based finance
application using a
Web-based Java solution.
The project development
team's background was
based on mainframe
technologies with some
client/server and Web
experience (HTML, ASP,
basic Java, and JSP). Feb. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 12,056 Replies: 1 |
exe4j by ej-technologies By Jan Boesenberg Although developing
full-featured desktop
applications with Java
has become a manageable
task and performance has
improved greatly,
developers still face
obstacles that make it
difficult to get their
Java applications more
widely accepted. One
problem with many Java
standalone applications
is a lack of integration
into the desktop
environment, which
frequently alienates
users. Jan. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 14,139 Replies: 4 |
Adalon 2.2 by Synthis
Corporation By Carl Burn Is there a development
team out there who has
never heard the following
phrases when delivering a
project? 'That's not what
we wanted...' or 'We
thought it would also do
this...' Then even when
we are on target, we're
all too often hit with
requirements that were
simply not communicated
and end up failing to
meet our client's
expectations. Dec. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 11,046 |
Rational XDE by Rational
Software Corporation By Jason Bell Over the past few years
the integrated
development environment
has raged on. For years
I've used a text editor
and a build tool to
create my Java software;
I used no set processes
or design methods. The
integration of UML
modeling and Java coding
makes obvious sense to a
software designer, but a
programmer like me has to
ask, can XDE mentor me
and make me think
differently about the way
I design software? Dec. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 24,953 Replies: 12 |
What Is OpenSymphony? By Justen Stepka OpenSymphony is a
collection of Java open
source projects that
provides a foundation for
building J2EE
applications. Each
application tends to
build from another
OpenSymphony component in
a loosely coupled manner,
providing a best-of-breed
option. Dec. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 9,762 Replies: 1 |
JSuite 6 by Infragistics
Corporation By Paul Frey As most Java developers
know, the standard GUI
components provided with
the Java platform are
barely adequate for most
applications. We've all
had to extend the base
Swing (JFC) components
and AWT components to
develop the rich user
interface components that
users expect today. Nov. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 12,622 Replies: 3 |
Adaptive Server Anywhere
Version 8 by iAnywhere
Solutions By Breck Carter The latest version of
Adaptive Server Anywhere
(ASA) marks a major
turning point in the
history of this product.
Prior to version 8 the
most important design
goals were ease of use,
small footprint, and
cross-platform support,
with high speed taking a
back seat. Nov. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 12,335 |
ASK: Making Server-Side
Development Easy By Enrique Perez Gil I do believe the center
of Java development is
the programmer who is
creating object-oriented
Java code. But how do you
achieve this when
developing Web
applications? In the
Internet scenario the
client and server sides
are disconnected: the
front end is shown to the
user miles away from
where the real code
that's reacting to it is
executed. Nov. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 8,463 |
HIP 1.0 PJ and J2 By Matthew Dodd Interacting with software
can be extremely annoying
or incredibly exciting
depending on the user
interface. While one GUI
can leave you hopelessly
confused and deny the
execution of simple tasks
because you can't find
the right button, another
GUI can draw you in with
its appealing and
conclusive features,
making the implementation
of even complex
procedures a walk in the
park. Oct. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 10,046 |
JBuilder 7.0 Enterprise
Edition By Ajit Sagar There's no doubt about
it. Borland makes great
products for developers.
They're definitely
expensive and usually
complex but very
powerful. I've been using
JBuilder 6 for several
months, and when I had
the opportunity to review
the latest version, I
jumped at the chance. Oct. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 19,438 Replies: 9 |
FULCRUM Professional
Edition 1.1 By Kedar Godse Over the past couple of
years, a number of Java
development tools have
appeared on the market;
these tools focus on
various aspects of
software development,
such as modeling,
deployment, and testing,
and aim to increase
productivity. Sep. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 10,783 |
IntelliJ IDEA 3.0 By Duane Fields I must admit, until
recently my idea of an
integrated development
environment was Emacs, a
couple of shell windows,
and a six-pack of Dr.
Pepper. I had nothing
against IDEs, in fact I
was all for them, I just
couldn't find one that
worked for me, instead of
the other way around. Sep. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 31,193 Replies: 53 |
Small Worlds 1.5 By Dale Churchett It takes more than a
group of keen developers
coding like mad to create
a software system that
meets requirements yet is
robust to change. As new
requirements are
discovered, new code must
be written and existing
code maintained. Without
careful consideration of
code structure,
packaging, and component
dependencies, a large
system can quickly turn
into a 'big ball of mud.' Aug. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 10,178 |
Show Report By Steven Berkowitz While I wandered, head
down, among the detritus
of the post dot-com era,
a new world order was
forming. When I looked
up, I found the technical
world rallying under a
new banner - Web
services. Savior or hype?
I had to know. What
better place to learn
than the world's largest
Web services event? Aug. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 9,458 |
BEA WebLogic Workshop By Joe Mitchko To fully appreciate the
power behind Workshop,
you need to know a bit
about Java Web Services
(JWS), an up-and-coming
standard in the J2EE
world. Just as you can
embed Java code in a JSP
file and have it compile
on the application
server, Java code in a
JWS file is compiled
automatically into a Web
service. Jul. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 11,813 |
Enterprise JavaBeans By Ajit Sagar Although I've been
following EJB 2.0 very
closely, it was only
recently that I walked
into a project that was
the perfect venue for its
new features, such as the
much enhanced
container-managed
persistence and local
interfaces. And
Enterprise JavaBeans,
written by Richard
Monson-Haefel, fit the
bill as a reference and
learning guide. May. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 11,439 |
Java-Miner by CAST By Jason Bell It's unfortunate that
programmers come and go
at an alarming rate in
the IT industry, leaving
code that must be
maintained by someone who
quite frequently had no
hand in writing it.
Software engineers using
UML have models on how
their programs behave,
but the rest of us are
left to read through
reams and reams of
methods. Most of the time
all you need is an
overview of how the
program is made up, not
the finer details. May. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 13,697 |
JDiff - What Really
Changed? By Matthew B Doar One of the most common
questions Java developers
ask after downloading a
new version of a product
is: 'What really
changed?' JDiff is an
open source Java tool,
based on Javadoc and
developed by the author,
that produces HTML
documentation describing
the precise API changes
between two versions of a
product. Apr. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 10,423 Replies: 1 |
AshnaMQ 2.0 Standard
Edition By Andrew Wu Since its release in late
1997, the JMS API has
established itself as a
core component in the
Java Enterprise suite. A
number of vendors are
offering implementations
of JMS with one of the
latest coming from
Ashnasoft Corporation.
Although new to JMS,
Ashnasoft has brought its
experience and a
reputation from JTurbo
(sold to New Atlanta last
year) to the scene. Apr. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 9,627 |
Weblogic Portal 4.0 by
BEA By John Walker The appeal of Web portal
applications relies on
how conveniently they
provide a coherent and
unified gateway to
dynamic content and
applications that are
tailored to users' needs
and interests. The goal
of portal applications
for the enterprise is to
attract users with
specialized content and
services, and then retain
these users by
personalizing their
experiences. Apr. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 9,806 |