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PC Magazine January 20, 2004 Richard V. Dragan |
Flash Remoting Macromedia's new technology lets browser-based applications easily interact with servers running Java, Microsoft .NET, or Web services. |
New Architect October 2002 Michael Hurwicz |
Web Services Made Easy Macromedia ColdFusion MX is a complete rewrite, offering several new features: Web services, new security framework, XML support, Unicode support, better integration with Flash and Dreamweaver, etc. |
New Architect October 2002 Neil McAllister |
Content 2.0 Weighing the alternatives to HTML. Most notable among the current crop are Macromedia Flash MX and the Curl content language. |
JavaWorld January 2003 |
Letters to the Editor Does Flash support Java Message Service (JMS)? Is a second interface necessary with the Cascading Menu pattern? Is the Sun Certified Enterprise Architect exam biased toward English speakers? JavaWorld authors answer these questions and more in this month's Letters to the Editor. |
New Architect June 2002 Richard Koman |
Build Rich Front Ends to Your Web Applications As we move to the world of Web applications, it becomes clear that HTML isn't always the best tool for providing a robust front end for real-time Web applications. Enter Flash MX... |
InternetNews March 29, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Macromedia 'Flexes' Its Flash Muscles The company rebuilds its Flash authoring tools from the ground up to make Web application development standards-based and programmer-friendly. |
JavaWorld June 2002 Humphrey Sheil & Michael Monteiro |
Rumble in the jungle: J2EE versus .Net, Part 1 Heard a lot about .Net versus J2EE? Wondering what that conflict means for you? An unbiased explanation as to how J2EE and .Net match up. |
JavaWorld May 2002 |
A J2EE presentation pattern: Applets with servlets and XML Sometimes a standard HTML view on your J2EE-based system doesn't offer a sophisticated enough user interface. Based on the pattern described here, you can enhance such a Web interface with the Java Plug-in. The Java Plug-in lets you embed applets that consume XML documents and display the contained data in a particular way. These XML documents contain presentation data derived from servlets looking at your business logic tier. This lets your users access powerful UI components while still retaining a strong decoupling between the business logic and presentation tiers---without complicated firewall issues. |
JavaWorld September 26, 2003 James Borck |
Laszlo builds flashy Web apps The Laszlo Presentation Server 1.0 Java-based server application capitalizes on Flash for a dramatic user experience, but shortcomings in its development environment, data-binding facilities, and integration of Web services standards and security leaves room for improvement. |
JavaWorld December 2000 Anil Hemrajani |
Applets: Still essential to Java Applets were supposed to revolutionize the Web, but their use has diminished significantly. What's the problem? And what will it take to make them successful? |
JavaWorld March 2002 Jonathan Lurie & R. Jason Belanger |
The great debate: .Net vs. J2EE This article describes a Web service and compares J2EE's major components with .Net's. With this ammunition, you can power your way through a conversation concerning how Web services will benefit your department's strategic direction... |
PC Magazine March 16, 2004 Richard V. Dragan |
Macromedia Centralizes Applications Why can't it be as easy to buy, download, and run software as it is to do the same with music? Macromedia is trying to do just that with Macromedia Central, which strives to be a better way to distribute and run software. |
New Architect June 2002 Steven Champeon |
Why DHTML Will Win Competition among user interface tools heats up... |
InternetNews March 31, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Xamlon Out to Connect Flash to .NET New version of XML authoring tool lets Microsoft programmers create Flash-friendly applications. |
JavaWorld July 2001 Raghavan N. Srinivas |
Java Web Start to the rescue On the client side, Java proves its viability with its ubiquitous availability on desktop and thin clients. This article introduces client-side deployment using several different Java technologies, with a particular focus on Java Web Start... |
InternetNews October 6, 2005 Jim Wagner |
Macromedia Bends Flex For a Million Devs The creator of the near-ubiquitous Flash Player wants to get a million developers creating rich Internet applications using Flex on Flash. |
Macworld July 2002 Martin Gittens |
Popular Web-Animation and Interactivity Program Is Even More Powerful Flash MX offers an improved interface, new video support, OS X compatibility, and a host of powerful scripting tools that, when used in conjunction with the new Flash Player 6, produce leaner -- and significantly meaner -- Web sites. |
JavaWorld November 2001 |
Java Product News Borland releases J2EE platform... Popkin's System Architect 8.5 now available... MKS and Borland combine products... Phaos toolkit scouts out digital certificates... Atinav launches embedded development platform... HP and NDS put Java on TV... etc. |
JavaWorld November 2002 B.J. Fesq |
Sun boosts enterprise Java This article provides a clear understanding of the enterprise Java platform's direction and introduces J2EE (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition) 1.4's support for emerging Web services standards. |
JavaWorld January 2002 Yuan & Long |
Build database-powered mobile applications on the Java platform This article explains how to create mobile database applications using the Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition/Mobile Information Device Profile (J2ME/MIDP) and the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE). The authors introduce an architecture that uses JavaServer Pages (JSPs) as middleware between a MIDP frontend and a database backend. They also explain specific design decisions and implementation issues, such as persistent storage, network connection, session management, and data communication. Their discussion focuses on the integration between the client and server-side Java applications. |
JavaWorld March 1, 2002 |
Java Product News O'Reilly publishes Web Services Essentials... Espial and Devicetop.com announce developer contest... Data Junction improves data transformation suite... ReportMill 5 now available... EspressChart ES organizes data into dynamic charts... etc. |
JavaWorld August 22, 2003 Michael Juntao Yuan |
"Java everywhere" is for world domination The author explains the "Java everywhere" vision and its relationship with traditional Java philosophies, and then discusses its impact on developers, especially today's enterprise developers. |
JavaWorld September 2000 Tal Liron |
Launching into Java Here's the vision: Instead of clunky Web applications, service providers will design full-blown Java applications with multiple windows, drag and drop, printing and database-query capabilities, directory access, and message queuing, all in a package that runs from users' desktops... |
JavaWorld March 9, 2001 Lisa Alexander |
Java Product News Sun and Ope... Brokat helps enterprises create user-centric services... Sun releases J2EE Connector Architecture beta... FioranoMQ 5.0 Java messaging server features improved scalability and security... WebGain and ComponentSource to improve EJB component product offerings... |
JavaWorld November 30, 2001 |
Java Product News JBuilder 6 now available... UDDI project enhances Business Registry... SoftQuad and Interwoven form alliance... Small Worlds provides visual map of Java software... Anest Software releases Jini toolkit... JCP wraps up a successful year... etc. |
JavaWorld September 2000 Todd Sundsted |
Alternative deployment methods, Part 3: The code In Part 3 of his series on application deployment, Todd Sundsted looks at the code that supports the deployment tool he described in Part 2. This article explains the framework's operation, highlights its design features, and explores the challenges of building this type of application. |
JavaWorld July 2000 Todd Sundsted |
Alternative deployment methods, Part 2: The best of both worlds How to combine the best features of applets with a handful of more traditional deployment techniques, creating a solution both easy to use and powerful enough for the enterprise |
JavaWorld July 2002 Humphrey Sheil & Michael Monteiro |
Rumble in the jungle: J2EE versus .Net, Part 2 In Part 2 of this two-part series, the authors shift from the theoretical to the practical by demonstrating how to employ J2EE and Microsoft .Net to develop a concrete Web application. |
JavaWorld May 2, 2003 Rick Grehan |
Web services creation made easy The BEA WebLogic Workshop 8.1 development environment allows developers to create J2EE Web services that run atop the WebLogic application server. The IDE requires minimal understanding of J2EE and allows the developer to concentrate on business logic. |
JavaWorld November 2001 Dustin Marx |
JSP best practices This article discusses simple approaches and best practices that, when used correctly, facilitate JavaServer Pages (JSPs) development. These tips ensure reusable and easily maintainable JSPs, JSPs that allow developers to focus on their programming strengths... |
Macworld January 2004 Martin Gittins |
Flash MX 2004 It's the development tool of choice for creating rich Internet content. |
JavaWorld December 7, 2001 |
Java Product News Espial releases TV application suite... NeuArchitect applications now deploy on HP app server... WebGain updates TopLink with EJB 2.0... LynuxWorks to license Apogee's Aphelion IDE... Oracle adds CapeStudio support to its app server... etc. |
JavaWorld March 23, 2001 Lisa Alexander |
Java Product News Fortress 1.0 Flash Edition creates interactive, multiuser applications... JHotDraw 5.2 now available... Sitraka integrates JClass Java components with Forte for Java... MetaViewJ speeds development of Java/JDBC applications and applets... Sun releases Jiro Technology 1.5... etc. |
JavaWorld December 2001 Taylor Cowan |
XSLT blooms with Java XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformation) offers an excellent vehicle for styling XML documents as HTML. However, it shows some weakness when the transformation requires extensive logic. When XSLT languages fail to complete the job, you can extend your stylesheets with Java classes and take advantage of both languages' features. This article demonstrates how to extend XSLT with Java. You will learn how to instantiate and invoke methods on Java objects from within an XSLT stylesheet. The article also demonstrates how XML nodes are passed to Java classes and returned back to the stylesheet for further processing. |
New Architect March 2003 Neil McAllister |
The Great Migration The rocky road to J2EE and .NET |
JavaWorld March 8, 2002 |
Java Product News SolarMetric expands Kodo's enterprise abilities... WebLogic EJBs can now access ZeoSphere Server... Metrowerks opens wireless development centers... Motorola and HillCast Technologies bring financial news to Java phones... Transvirtual Technologies launches Web services engine... etc. |
InternetNews August 23, 2004 Michael Singer |
Macromedia Rolls New Flex Builder Tool The Web graphics software maker re-launches its development tool designed for building presentation layers and to be more compliant with J2EE. |
JavaWorld June 2000 Julie Salzmann |
News and New Product Briefs IBM unveils chips with silicon-on-insulator transistors; Syndeo Collaboration Suite creates Web applications with EJBs; MapXtreme 3.0 adds Web capabilities; BeVocal sounds off with VocalSuites; Flashline Component Manager organizes Java resources; Microsoft discovers IE 5 security bug, etc. |
JavaWorld December 2001 |
Java Product News (updated December 21, 2001) Borland introduces Web services toolkit... Innoopract launches W4 Toolkit... Java XML Pack now available... X-Hive releases upgraded XML database... Softera updates UML modeling tool... Thought Inc. adds Ant to CocoBase Saffeine protects code with JCE... XMetaL 3 now supports XML Schema... SpiritCache 1.2 now shipping... Flashline and TogetherSoft form partnership... Jcorporate updates eContent... etc. |
JavaWorld January 2001 Julie Salzmann |
Java Product News Vignette V/5 adds J2EE support... Oracle9i Dynamic Services now available... Energis debuts video email solution... Lutris inks deal with Borland... NetSilicon plans to add Java support... etc. |
JavaWorld December 2000 Steven Gould |
Develop n-tier applications using J2EE Introducing the 13 core technologies of the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE): JDBC, JNDI, EJBs, RMI, JSP, Java servlets, XML, JMS, Java IDL, JTS, JTA, JavaMail, and JAF.... |
JavaWorld December 2000 Julie Salzmann |
Java Product News Sun unveils Forte for Java, release 2.0... BEA updates WebLogic Server... Sun and JCP set specs for Java Management Extensions... TowerJ Java VM deploys Java apps on Itanium processors... Software AG accelerates application communication with SOAP... etc. |
JavaWorld February 2002 Jeff Hanson |
Use Web services to integrate Web applications with EISs Web services expose business processes to bolster object-oriented and component-based programming with a services-based model. You can enhance your current programming model to support Web services by adding a service contract... |
JavaWorld June 20, 2003 Frank Sommers |
J2EE 1.4 eases Web service development This article reviews J2EE 1.4's new client and server programming models for Web services. |
JavaWorld December 14, 2001 |
Java Product News XMetaL 3 now supports XML Schema... SpiritCache 1.2 now shipping... Flashline and TogetherSoft form partnership... Jcorporate updates eContent... LogicLibrary and TogetherSoft integrate products... iBus//Mobile now supports IBM's J9 VM... etc. |
InternetNews September 16, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Xamlon Refocuses Amidst XAML Craze The company that promised 'XAML now' turns to today's Web tools instead for its newest release. .NET developers can use the tool to create applications for Microsoft's upcoming Vista OS. |
InternetNews July 30, 2004 Erin Joyce |
Browser Tools Need to Grow Up For all the expectations we have about advanced business transactions over the Web, the latest tools -- as good as they may be -- tell us the industry has some growing up to do before presentation layers can handle the rich applications and data exchange we now expect. |
JavaWorld April 4, 2003 |
Java Product News QFS updates UI testing tool... INM introduces Moka Xtra... etc. |
JavaWorld April 27, 2001 Jennifer Wilson |
Java Product News Motorola releases first MIDP-certified wireless phones... WebGain's Application Composer builds EJB applications... Brokat Advanced Server/J 4.6 now J2EE-compatible... OASIS releases Java tests... Poet and NewMonics integrate products... etc. |
JavaWorld January 2, 2004 Humphrey Sheil |
In pursuit of perfection If we could just address Java's weak points, we might make Java that mythical beast -- the perfect technology platform. So then, what are those changes? Is there such a thing as the perfect technology platform, and does Java have the potential to become it? |