February 12, 2007
category: Developers
Read part 1 and part 2 in a blog series that discusses how to develop and deploy JSR 168 portlets for the Sun Java Enterprise System portal.
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category: Developers
Read part 1 and part 2 in a blog series that discusses how to develop and deploy JSR 168 portlets for the Sun Java Enterprise System portal.
More »
category: Developers
Actually, the title should be "How Does Your Generation Grow"
but then the literary reference would have been totally lost.
 ...
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category: Developers
I just learned today that the
Grizzly project
went live last week.
This is the fast web container part of the
GlassFish application server
broken out as its own project.
Grizzly has been developed by
Jean-François Arcand
(jfarcand) o...
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category: Java Technology
Intel (http://online.wsj.com/quotes/main.html?type=djn symbol=intc)
Corp. has developed a prototype chip with the equivalent of 80
electronic brains, the latest sign of a major...
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category: Java Technology
Chip geeks and semiconductor mavens from around the
world are converging on San Francisco this week to show off their
latest...
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category: Java Technology
Sun Microsystems forthcoming Niagara 2 processor (http://news.com.com/Suns+Niagara+2+doubles+down+with+twice+the+threads/2100-1006_3-6108880.html) will run at a core clock frequency of 1.4GHz, one of the processors...
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category: Java Technology
In the second part of the screen cast series (part
1), I show the various ways by which NetBeans IDE can invoke a Web service
endpoint. The first
part showed only the default way to invoke the endpoint, but this screen
cast shows two...
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category: Java Technology
In my limited research on the net, I have noticed that even though there are excellent blogs and articles covering this topic, a step by step description of a simple demo on making the Web service end-points work on these two different platforms is non...
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category: Java Technology
I have this blog for a long time - in fact, I think I was one of the first 100 or so webloggers, as I joined it shortly after JavaOne 2003. Still, I havent blogged that much (just 22 entries in 41 months), specially last year (only 4 semi-crappy posts)...
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