Article Discussion
Audio: Gavin King on Hibernate
Summary: In this audio interview, Gavin King, founder of the Hibernate project, discusses the relationship between Hibernate and EJB3, various strategies for collection fetching, why transparent persistence is a bad idea, and the role of caching in persistence architectures.
2 posts.
The ability to add new comments in this discussion is temporarily disabled.
Most recent reply: September 2, 2005 5:18 AM by Eric
    Bill
     
    Posts: 409 / Nickname: bv / Registered: January 17, 2002 4:28 PM
    Audio: Gavin King on Hibernate
    August 23, 2005 8:00 PM      
    In this audio interview, Gavin King, founder of the Hibernate project, discusses the relationship between Hibernate and EJB3, various strategies for collection fetching, why transparent persistence is a bad idea, and the role of caching in persistence architectures.

    http://www.artima.com/lejava/audio/gavin_king_hibernate.html

    What do you think of Gavin's comments?
    • Vincent
       
      Posts: 40 / Nickname: vincent / Registered: November 13, 2002 7:25 AM
      Re: Gavin King on Hibernate
      August 29, 2005 11:48 PM      
      Bill,

      A suggestion for Artima. There are now at least three audio articles available on Artima and, doubtless, more on the way.

      At the moment there is little to distinguish them (for search purposes) from other articles. As a result, it took me a while to find even this small number when trying to locate them all.

      I think it would be useful distinguish the non-text articles in some way; perhaps to group them together in a new section or maybe to prefix the heading in some way, such as:

      AUDIO: Gavin King on Hibernate

      Vince.
    • Eric
       
      Posts: 1 / Nickname: erix / Registered: September 1, 2005 4:25 AM
      Re: Gavin King on Hibernate
      September 2, 2005 5:18 AM      
      obviously my opinion is a little bit biased but I must say I'm far from being convinced by Gavin's arguments against transparent persistence.
      Mostly opinions rather than explanations.
      Best Regards, Eric.