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JavaWorld August 2001 Bin Yang |
E++: A pattern language for J2EE applications, Part 2 E++, a pattern-based Java 2, Enterprise Edition application framework, promotes modularity, reusability, extensibility, portability, inversion of control, consistence, and scalability. The framework architecture captures reusable patterns and design experiences on the J2EE platform... |
JavaWorld June 2002 Walter Hurst |
Design patterns make for better J2EE apps This introductory-level article describes how to combine J2EE with object-oriented design patterns to build a scalable, flexible, and extensible application architecture. It explains the importance of application architecture and design patterns and provides basic tips for using design patterns to build application architecture for J2EE projects. |
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 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... |
New Architect January 2003 Paul Sholtz |
Instant Update Making your data and spreadsheets Web viewable through MVC: The Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern is an established and well-understood software design method. |
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 Our industry has spawned folklore and rules of thumb to guide us how best to use EJB -- some true, some out of date, and some pure fabrication.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... |
JavaWorld October 2002 Abulsorour & Visveswaran |
Business process automation made easy with Java, Part 2 Design options for rule engine integration, data synchronization considerations, workflow engine integration, and some best-practice quality-of-service considerations. Also, emerging data interchange standards that enable a more flexible solution |
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 July 2000 Jason Cai, Ranjit Kapila, & Gaurav Pal |
HMVC: The layered pattern for developing strong client tiers Creating the client tier of an n-tier Web architecture is extremely time-consuming, with an immense chance for error. In this article, Jason Cai, Ranjit Kapila, and Gaurav Pal explain HMVC -- an industrial-strength design pattern that can significantly lower the risks and costs associated with developing a Java-based client tier. |
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 September 2002 Visveswaran & Abulsorour |
Business process automation made easy with Java, Part 1 Business process automation initiatives are transforming today's enterprises by optimizing efficiencies, reducing costs, and increasing shareholder value. This article explains existing J2EE-centric rule engine solutions, as well as where and how they fit within an enterprise architecture. |
JavaWorld October 2001 David Geary |
Amaze your developer friends with design patterns Design patterns are proven techniques for implementing robust, malleable, reusable, and extensible object-oriented software. This article introduces design patterns to Java developers and explores Strategy, Composite, and Decorator -- three common, yet powerful, design patterns in the JDK... |
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 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 January 2002 Jason Cai |
Combine the Session Facade pattern with XML This article explores the benefits and advantages of using the Session Facade pattern. The author discusses when to use the pattern with value objects, and when to use it with XML. He also provides a detailed implementation of the Session Facade pattern integrated with XML... |
JavaWorld July 18, 2003 James Carman |
Get down to business In this article, you will learn how to structure your applications such that modifications to the business object implementation do not require changes to the user interface using a simple framework for accessing your business objects. |
JavaWorld August 2002 Abraham Kang |
Enterprise application integration using J2EE Java represents an ideal language for EAI because it runs on most, if not all, operating systems and boasts good support from EAI tool vendors. In addition, J2EE provides the security, messaging, and reliability services required in EAI. |
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 2001 Vincent DiBartolo |
FreeMarker: An open alternative to JSP You can place FreeMarker tags in text files of any format and are not married to any server-side architecture or solution. FreeMarker is easily extensible, and you can quickly build a library of reusable custom objects that will live longer than the technology solutions that utilize them... |
JavaWorld October 2000 Siva Visveswaran |
Dive into connection pooling with J2EE Connection pooling is a technique used for sharing server resources among requesting clients. This article focuses on support for connection pooling of both database resources and nondatabase resources in a J2EE environment... |
New Architect June 2002 Al Williams |
Design Patterns for Web Programming Do you need the Model View Controller (MVC) design pattern? MVC can help you design web architectures that will withstand the test of time... |
JavaWorld June 2002 David Geary |
Take command of your software How to use the Command pattern both in client-side Java to attach application-specific behavior to Swing menu items and in server-side Java to implement application-specific behavior with the Apache Struts application framework. |
JavaWorld December 2002 Ben Hui |
Big designs for small devices This article describes four design patterns, Cascading Menu, Wizard Dialog, Pagination, and Slide Show, which make interactive content creation for mobile devices with J2ME easier. These design patterns are simple to understand and apply to your projects. |
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 October 2000 Anil Hemrajani |
Do you really need Enterprise JavaBeans? Anil Hemrajani offers his opinions on whether Enterprise JavaBeans are really necessary... |
New Architect March 2003 Neil McAllister |
The Great Migration The rocky road to J2EE and .NET |
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 2000 Sanjay Mahapatra |
Programming restrictions on EJB Sanjay provides an overview of the programming restrictions on EJB component code that developers should adhere to and lists the features in Java that you'd be wise to avoid in order to write reliable and portable EJB 1.1 components.. |
JavaWorld May 2002 Zhong & Lehr |
US Department of Energy signs on to J2EE If you architect many secure Web applications, authentication and authorization are always important concerns. Defining an architecture so that users can sign on to many n-tier Web applications only once---regardless of who built the applications, when they were built, or what kind of OSs and application servers they run on---is always a big challenge. This article presents a single sign-on architecture. |
JavaWorld July 18, 2003 Amit Poddar |
Add concurrent processing with message-driven beans This article describes in detail how message-driven beans can effectively provide concurrency to J2EE applications. |
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... |
JavaWorld August 22, 2003 |
Java Product News Metanology produces two new MDE tools... Salmon's SOFIA swims forward... FWA Software integrates Struts 1.1 tags libraries... etc. |
JavaWorld August 29, 2003 |
Java Product News Systinet extends IDEs for Web services; JuggerNET meshes Java & .Net; Jinspired pumps up JDBInsight 2.0; & more |
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 June 2002 Dirk Laessig |
Score big with JSR 77, the J2EE Management Specification The specification's core is based on the model of managed objects, explained in this article. JSR 77 also defines an Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) component for easily accessing these managed objects. |
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 March 2002 |
Letters to the Editor JavaWorld readers warn about synchronization; present a Servlet 2.2-compliant solution for mixing protocols in Web apps; suggest using the Data Object Access design pattern with the Value Object design pattern... etc. |
JavaWorld December 2001 |
Letters to the Editor In this month's letters, David Geary expounds further on the Decorator pattern, Humphrey Sheil defends EJB performance, and Jeff Friesen talks more trash... |
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 2, 2001 |
Java Product News Compuware introduces OptimalJ... Matisse combines native object support with server-based SQL... Houston Technology Group upgrades EJBX... Instantis releases Web services environment... Sun ONE enlists Aligo... CreamTec updates WebCream... VMGear releases Optimizeit Suite... etc. |
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. |
PC Magazine April 19, 2004 Richard V. Dragan |
Sun Java Studio Enterprise 6 Java Studio is a natural fit for any enterprise that runs Sun's application server platform. |
JavaWorld March 2003 Michael Juntao Yuan |
J2EE and beyond As J2EE technology matures, basic Java and J2EE programming skills are no longer adequate to secure a highly paid job in today's tightened market. This article discusses the latest trends in J2EE and developer training. |
JavaWorld September 5, 2003 |
Java Product News Apache boosts Turbine & Torque... Sims Computing advances Flux 5.0 Job Scheduler... IconAge delivers JWin Express Enterprise |
JavaWorld December 2002 Humphrey Sheil |
Get the inside track on J2EE architect certification This article examines the pros and cons of pursuing J2EE architect certification and dispels common misconceptions about both the exam and its associated certification. |
JavaWorld August 2001 Scott Stark |
Integrate security infrastructures with JBossSX The current Enterprise JavaBean and Servlet specifications omit integration between the application server and existing security infrastructures. This article describes how version 2.4 of the open source JBoss application server security extension project (JBossSX) uses Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS) login modules as its integration API. |
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 2001 Eoin Lane |
Add XML to your J2EE applications The author proposes an open source replacement for the J2EE presentation layer by building an XML-aware application server with a fully operational end-to-end solution. The solution consists of an application server based on open source technologies from Apache, jBoss, and the W3C... |
JavaWorld October 26, 2001 |
Java Product News Sun ONE enlists Aligo... CreamTec updates WebCream... VMGear releases Optimizeit Suite... PolarLake to add Web services support to XML development tool... ArtinSoft enhances automatic migration engine... O'Reilly releases third edition of Enterprise JavaBeans... etc. |
JavaWorld December 2001 David Geary |
Web application components made easy with Composite View If you want to develop flexible and reusable JSP-based Web applications, you must separate presentation logic from business logic. Beyond that, you can extend that flexibility and reusability by separating content from layout... |