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InternetNews January 11, 2011 |
Ruby on Java to Get a Boost With JRuby 1.6 Next iteration of Java implementation of Ruby language, now in release candidate, will expand compatibility with Microsoft Windows and integration with Ruby on Rails. |
InternetNews September 7, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
JRuby Developers Join The Sun Fold Charles Nutter and Thomas Enebo had been developing JRuby in their spare time. Now the two are full time software engineers for Sun, reporting to Tim Bray, Sun Fellow and creator of XML. |
InternetNews March 7, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Sun Shines Ruby Support For Java Developers Sun Microsystems furthered its commitment to dynamic languages with this week's announcement that its NetBeans Java development toolkit would offer support for Ruby development. |
InternetNews May 26, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
A Gem Of A Language for Java and .Net Independent projects hope to bring Ruby to the two widely-used development frameworks. |
InternetNews November 11, 2009 |
What's Google Thinking With Go? Does the industry really need another programming language? |
JavaWorld January 2001 Ashlee Vance |
Microsoft outlines Java migration path to .Net Microsoft outlined its plans Thursday for the delivery of development tools designed to migrate Java applications onto the company's signature .Net platform... |
InternetNews August 20, 2010 |
Ruby 1.9.2 Casts Long Shadow on Related Projects With the long-awaited release of Ruby 1.9.2, billed as the first "production-ready 1.9 implementation," the Ruby project takes a big step forward. |
InternetNews December 12, 2007 Sean Michael Kerner |
NetBeans 6 Takes Flight Sun Microsystems is hoping to win over converts to its new NetBeans 6.0 IDE, which came out today. |
Linux Journal March 20, 2002 Pjotr Prins |
Ruby: Productive Programming Language A brief overview of popular languages and how Ruby matches up. |
Salon.com January 21, 2003 Farhad Manjoo |
Is there hope for Java? A judge has ordered Microsoft to make it easy for Sun's popular programming language to work with Windows. But the remedy may be too little, too late. |
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. |
InternetNews July 31, 2009 |
Defections Batter Sun Microsystems With talent and customer defections, Oracle could have its hands full resuscitating Sun by the close of its blockbuster merger. |
InternetNews November 6, 2008 Sean Michael Kerner |
Sun Serves Up Some Java EE 6 in GlassFish Open Source GlassFish Enterprise Server v3 Prelude is production ready and showing off early Java EE 6 features. |
CIO September 15, 2005 Eric Knorr |
Java Goes Wild Vendors need to give programmers what they want -- or open source may take it by force. |
InternetNews September 28, 2010 |
Rubinius Looks to Rev Ruby With 1.1 Release With the release of version 1.1, Ruby implementation Rubinius promises developers of the open source language swifter performance and improved memory. |
InternetNews October 15, 2010 |
Open Source Fog Looks to Drive Ruby in the Cloud With formal support from commercial vendor Engine Yard, the open source Fog project is looking to scale and ease the path for Ruby developers with cloud interoperability. |
InternetNews June 23, 2009 Sean Michael Kerner |
Ruby Use Grows Among U.S. Developers According to a new study from Evans Data, Ruby use is on the rise in North America. On a year-over-year basis, Ruby usage has increased by 40 percent so far in 2009. |
Linux Journal April 4, 2006 Pat Eyler |
The Gemcutter's Workshop: Many Developments in the Ruby Community News about the Ruby programming language: Mongrel, JRuby, ZenTest 3.1.0, Rails 1.1, etc. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 6, 2014 Christian Camerota |
Why Businesses Need a Language Strategy Organizations that effectively marry language strategy with their global talent management process gain a leg up on the competition, says Tsedal Neeley and Robert Steven Kaplan. |