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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 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 October 2000 Anil Hemrajani |
Do you really need Enterprise JavaBeans? Anil Hemrajani offers his opinions on whether Enterprise JavaBeans are really necessary... |
InternetNews November 19, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Clash of the .Net, J2EE Clans? Microsoft's development platform has made huge strides in the two years since its debut, but Java proponents say they're just picking up steam. |
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... |
JavaWorld July 2002 |
Letters to the Editor: 'Rumble' causes a stir "Rumble in the Jungle: J2EE Versus .Net, Part 1" authors Humphrey Sheil and Michael Monteiro respond to a flurry of reader letters concerning the differences between application development in J2EE compared to Microsoft's .Net. |
CIO November 15, 2001 D.F. Tweney |
Strong Java Despite Microsoft's best efforts, Java is well-established in the enterprise. Can it hold its ground? |
JavaWorld July 2001 Mark Johnson |
A walking tour of J2EE This column describes the J2EE platform's place in enterprise Java, and outlines the platform's basic motivations and strategies... |
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? |
JavaWorld December 2001 Humphrey Sheil |
To EJB, or not to EJB? Our industry has spawned folklore and rules of thumb to guide us how best to use EJB -- some true, some out of date, and some pure fabrication. When and how to use EJB in your J2EE application, as well as how to know when EJBs are not the right solution for you... |
InternetNews January 8, 2004 Jim Wagner |
IBM Releases WebSphere 6 Sneak Peek The application server code base is seen giving developers a head start on J2EE 1.4 applications. |
JavaWorld June 2001 Tim Fielden |
Middleware that beats the budget For applications ranging from dynamic Websites to large-scale e-commerce systems, organizations shopping for a Java application server would do well to consider open source solutions. Many that provide enterprise-class features are available free or for low licensing fees... |
JavaWorld October 2001 Tom Sullivan |
Will .Net take down Java in 2002? Vendor's survey predicts more developers to build with .Net than Java next year... |
JavaWorld March 2003 |
Product Snapshot: BEA WebLogic Workshop 8.1 Workshop IDE designed to improve developer productivity |
InternetNews November 16, 2004 Michael Singer |
The Many Faces of J2EE, v5.0 Sun and Borland laud the developments but disagree on the deployments. |
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 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 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 November 2000 Mark Johnson |
C#: A language alternative or just J--?, Part 1 Early this summer, Microsoft caused a huge media splash by preannouncing .Net, a new distributed application framework. Integral to .Net is a new language called C#, which initially appears highly similar to Java. This article, the first in a two-part series, compares C# to Java -- describing language features and design trade-offs -- and places C# in the context of Microsoft's broader .Net strategy. |
JavaWorld June 2002 Jennifer Orr |
Is the JCP adequately preparing Java for Web services? The Java Community Process is currently reviewing Web services APIs that should prove important to Java Web services development. This article spotlights the latest Web services technologies and examines how the JCP is responding to Web services. |
InternetNews October 15, 2004 Michael Singer |
Report: J2EE in Jeopardy Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition, or J2EE, is a platform-independent standard designed for Web-based enterprise applications. It is also a standard with an uncertain future, according to some analysts. |
New Architect July 2002 B.J. Fesq |
Freedom of Choice A comparison of six J2EE 1.3-compliant application servers: BEA WebLogic Server 7.0 (beta), Borland Enterprise Server 5.0, IBM WebSphere 5.0 (beta), Macromedia JRun 4.0 (beta), Pramati Server 3.0, and Sybase Enterprise Application Server 4.1 (EAServer). |
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 September 2001 James R. Borck |
Leaders of the Web services pack The technology industry is abuzz about Web services. It's unclear, however, how Web services will affect developer's work, especially at this early stage. With that in mind, how do the Web service offerings from four leaders -- Microsoft, HP, IBM, and Sun Microsystems -- stack up? |
InternetNews January 23, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Vendor Strategies Evolve With App Servers The advent of J2EE 1.4 will make applications and interoperability better for the enterprise, but how they're run on the company network depends on whom you buy it from. |
JavaWorld January 2001 Chang Sau Sheong |
Get the app out So you have coded and compiled the world's greatest EJB/servlet/JSP. But how are you going to show it off? |
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 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 September 2000 Tom Yager |
Microsoft's C# public beta hits a high note Java's success, and Sun's control of it, has prompted Microsoft to respond with its C# initiative. C# in many ways is a blend of the power of C++ and Java's built-in protections. Java developers will be well served to learn about C#'s pros and cons -- and how the initiative could affect Java's future. |
JavaWorld September 2002 Robert McMillan |
IBM's grid conversion What lies beyond Web services? Some say the answer depends on the emerging model for distributed resource management known as grid computing. And if developers at IBM and the grid-based Globus Project are right, you'll be able to do grid computing with JBoss and IBM WebSphere within the year. |
JavaWorld March 2001 Humphrey Sheil |
J2EE project dangers! You need to juggle many balls when embarking on an enterprise Java project: vendor relationships, chronic over-engineering in both design and development, staying sane. This article analyzes the top 10 dangers that threaten the success of all enterprise Java projects... |
JavaWorld September 2002 Jonathan Lurie |
Product Snapshot: J# J# provides Java developers a key for entering the .Net platform |
JavaWorld April 2002 Robert McMillan |
The open road ahead Apache will now become a more active participant in the Java standardization process. But does this make Java open enough for the rest of the open source world? What exactly has changed in the Java Commuity Process, and what kind of impact will these changes have on the broader Java community? |
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 August 2001 John Rommel |
Will Web services jump-start the software slump? Web services have been hyped as the "new" new thing -- the future of business and personal living. The certainty of change, driven by the business necessity to deliver faster, better, and cheaper services, is continually transforming the Internet. |
JavaWorld August 3, 2001 |
Java Product News BEA releases WebLogic Server 6.1... DevelopMentor updates code reuse tool... Kinecta expands J2EE support... etc. |
JavaWorld December 2001 |
Sun adds Web services to J2EE The Java XML Pack adds capability for XML messaging and data binding, as well as remote procedure calls using SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol). |
JavaWorld November 9, 2001 |
Java Product News HP and NDS put Java on TV... SavaJe XE runs J2SE applications on devices... Creative Science Systems launches Web services-based compiler... ATG delivers Dynamo beta for WebLogic... Manning publishes new JSP book... Day releases JSP debugger... etc. |
JavaWorld September 2000 Tom Yager |
WebGain IDE fulfills your top-level Java development needs WebGain Standard Edition attempts to pack everything a Java developer may need. Despite the premium price, if you require special features with your Java development, WebGain may be the IDE product for you... |
JavaWorld June 2000 Tom Yager, InfoWorld Test Center |
High-priced iAS 6.0 difficult to justify The iPlanet Application Server 6.0 boasts speedy performance, good scalability, and J2EE certification. However, the product's drawbacks -- price in particular -- largely offset its benefits. |
InternetNews April 26, 2004 Michael Singer |
Shifting Alliances With J2EE 1.4 Sun, IBM, Oracle, BEA, Borland, JBoss and others tout version 1.4 as the platform of choice for enterprise -- even if each one develops it in its own special way. |
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 September 2001 Jian Zhong |
Step into the J2EE architecture and process By reading this article, you will better understand many important J2EE architecture topics, and be able to apply that knowledge to extend and modify this simple methodology to solve your special business problems... |
JavaWorld August 10, 2001 |
Java Product News Flashline launches reuse training and consulting services... Cape Clear Software updates CapeConnect... NeuVis Software and Oracle partner for J2EE development... |
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 January 2001 Tom Sullivan |
Sun outlines J2EE strategy Sun Microsystems today outlined its J2EE strategy for the coming year, gave a glimpse of its Web services strategy, and detailed a new release of the J2EE platform... |
JavaWorld March 2002 Humphrey Sheil |
The JavaOne grapevine, Part 2 JCP changes, Oracle's Java strategy, JavaServer Faces news, and more... |
JavaWorld January 3, 2003 |
Java Product News Wrox publishes certification guide... Xoetrope launches XTranslator... FirstSQL receives in-memory database architecture... Manning releases LDAP guide... Eclipse introduces new open source project... Software 7 launches JavaHelp authoring tool... etc. |
JavaWorld February 28, 2003 |
Java Product News Cape Clear updates WSDL Editor... Instantiations adds to CodePro product suite... AquaFold announces Aqua Data Studio 2.0... anacubis Viewer uncovers relationships and trends in data... Openwave announces new mobile toolkits... Sonic Software updates SonicMQ... etc. |