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InternetNews February 9, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
Compuware Releases New Web Services Tools Business software-maker Compuware believes that the model-driven pattern-based (MDPB) approach to Web services development will bridge what it calls a J2EE (define) skills gap. |
InternetNews February 5, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Sun Lights Up Java 1.5 Beta Sun predicts the new features in the latest Java release will make the language as popular on the desktop as in servers. |
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. |
InternetNews January 19, 2004 Jim Wagner |
New Java Widgets For Eclipse A new plug-in gives Java tool programmers at the IBM-led consortium a user interface for Web application development, but leaves NetBeans out. |
InternetNews January 15, 2004 Michael Singer |
NetBeans Roadmap Has Many Avenues Java creator James Gosling leaves the door open for work between the JTC and Eclipse with standardizing APIs as the key to happiness. |
InternetNews January 13, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Java Rivals Score Major Customers Sun Microsystems and BEA take their different approaches to help marquee customers succeed in lowering IT costs through software consolidation. |
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. |
InternetNews January 6, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Sun Launches Java Tool Community The new organization sees itself as a gentle shepherd -- not a home wrecker -- in the Java family. |
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 January 2, 2004 Allen Holub |
More on getters and setters This article provides one of several possible programmatic solutions to the get/set-elimination problem. In particular, it demonstrates how to construct both Web-based and client-side user interfaces without exposing your object's implementation to the entire program. |
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