Lessons Learned From Java EE’s Evolution
Published January 18th, 2010 Under General | Leave a Comment
Rod Johnson talks about Java’s evolution, in particular J2EE, presenting the lessons to be learned from its failures, like committee-led standards and container-managed frameworks, preparing to avoid such mistakes in the future.
http://www.infoq.com/presentations/Lessons-Learned-from-Java-EE
You call that full stack? First class JavaEE and JavaFX integration
Published October 14th, 2009 Under Coding, User Interface | Leave a Comment
With the official release of JavaFX Sun has recommitted itself to the hyper-competitive rich client UI market, competing directly against Silverlight & Adobe Air. JavaFX has one advantage over either of those technologies: synergy with JavaEE. This session will teach several techniques to tightly integrate JavaFX with JavaEE mainstays such as JSF, JAX-WS, EL & EJB. We’ll begin by linking the success of JavaFX to its ability to leverage existing JavaEE based infrastructure, while at the same time delivering on its core competencies relating to the five dimensions of media: video, audio, text, 3D & animation. With the business case made, we’ll select four of the many useful technologies from Java EE & justify our selection on the basis of enterprise demand for these features & their fit with the core mission of JavaFX. For each of JSF, JAX-WS, EL, and EJB we’ll get at what parts of those technologies are well suited to being leveraged from JavaFX & give demonstations of each.
Using a J2EE Server with Flex As Data Services
Published March 9th, 2009 Under Architecture, Coding | Leave a Comment
A brief introduction to the J2EE Server.
Rearchitecting Legacy J2EE Applications with Spring
Published November 20th, 2008 Under Architecture, Open Source Tools | Leave a Comment
This is presentation recorded on Thursday 13th July 2006 at Oracle City of London. Peter Pilgrim talks about rearchitecting legacy Java 2 Enterprise Edition applications with the Spring Framework 1.2.x. The Spring Framework innovated by combing a fully feldged dependency injection controller with a framework of support that wraps around and over existing J2EE APIs and open source technologies. Peter gives ten tips to migrate an older J2EE to a Spring enhanced application. Day 1:: Large Corporation Institution Day 2:: Suspect Architecture Types Day 3:: What are the Business Use Cases? Day 4:: Software Component Stack Day 5:: Prefer Spring Enhanced EJBs Day 6:: Prefer Spring JDBC Templates Day 7:: Prefer JMS Templates Day 8:: Push Forward For Agile Development Day 9:: Prefer Test Driven Design Day 10:: Long Term Implications