Old Articles: <Older 251-260 Newer> |
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JavaWorld May 2001 Anil Hemrajani |
Does Sun understand GUI design? Sun has done a great job with Swing, but Java has failed to dominate the client side like it has dominated the server side. This could be related to the fact that Sun's roots are in Unix... |
JavaWorld May 2001 |
Tech skills: Does Java trump COM when looking for work? One JavaWorld forum member claims Microsoft technologies are aimed at start-ups and wannabes -- and that Java programmers will ride out the tech dip... |
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 April 2001 Piet Jonas |
Secure type-safe collections A framework that overcomes the standard Java Collections Framework's main problem: its containers lack the ability to restrict themselves to storing objects of a specific type. The solution uses reflection, wrapper classes, and a collection of static factory methods... |
JavaWorld April 2001 Ilirjan Ostrovica |
Facilitate form processing with the Form Processing API This article introduces the Form Processing API, a Java servlet-based API that can help you simplify form processing... |
JavaWorld April 2001 Tarak Modi |
Clean up your wire protocol with SOAP, Part 2 Creating applications that use SOAP is not difficult, and Apache SOAP makes it even easier. Part 2 of this four-part series on SOAP will introduce you to Apache's SOAP implementation and walk you through some simple examples that demonstrate the essence of creating SOAP-based apps... |
JavaWorld April 2001 Tim Fielden |
A dose of Java strengthens WebLogic 6.0 BEA Systems' WebLogic 6.0 application server skillfully implements the J2EE standard, and boasts new features such as a built-in Web server... |
JavaWorld April 2001 Alex Kalinovsky |
Savor success with Java on the front end Java architects and managers face the challenge of choosing among Swing-based, HTML-based, and XML-based front ends for their applications... |
JavaWorld April 2001 Bin Yang |
E++: A pattern language for J2EE applications, Part 1 E++, an Alexandrian pattern language, describes the process for creating a J2EE framework. Compared with a loose pattern collection, E++ provides rules for design patterns to work together in solving a set of related problems... |
JavaWorld April 2001 Rinaldo Di Giorgio |
Serve clients' specific protocol requirements with Brazil, Part 4 An introduction to multicast via JRMS (Java Reliable Multicast Service). Multicast is a protocol that supports simultaneous message transmission to multiple recipients, without having a point-to-point connection with each recipient... |
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