This past week's java.net poll shows that, while DEVOXX is considered to be a great Java conference, JavaOne is still consided the premiere Java conference by most people who express some knowledge of both conferences. A total of 223 votes were cast. The exact question and results were:
Is DEVOXX now the premier Java conference?
24% (54 votes) - Yes
42% (93 votes) - Only if there are no more JavaOnes
4% (10 votes) - No, another conference is more important
26% (59 votes) - I don't know
3% (7 votes) - Other
The results of the (unscientific) survey reflect the prominence of both DEVOXX and JavaOne within the Java developer community, with JavaOne having the edge in terms of importance. The voters consider DEVOXX to be the second most important conference. No one who disagreed chose to name a conference other that JavaOne that ranks above DEVOXX in importance.
The high "I don't know" vote is not unexpected, since it's difficult to appraise the importance of conferences you've never attended. You can guess, certainly, based on reading reports from the conferences, and assessing the significance of the major news events the emanate from each conference; but, a more conservative approach is to select "I don't know" is you really don't have personal experience with one or both the conferences in question.
New poll: NetBeans IDE 6.8
Our new poll asks: "Do you plan to upgrade to NetBeans IDE 6.8?"
NetBeans IDE 6.8 offers best-in-class support for the entire Java EE 6 specification and the GlassFish Enterprise Server v3 platform. Simplify Java application development with Java EE 6 language features: less XML configuration and more POJO-like development; easily target and deploy to GlassFish v3...
The very first JavaFX JUG meeting in Silicon Valley was held on Dec 9th, 2009. http://www.svjugfx.org/. We had a special guest speaker in Richard Bair who gave an introductory talk on JavaFX. Also, Josh Marinacci happened to be in town from Portland, Or. Stephen Chin plugged Josh into the talk line-up before Richard. Josh commented that he was the "appetizer" before the main course...(i.e. Rich's talk). Josh showed-off his Project MaiTai (an open source tool for building interactive artwork-written in JavaFX) and he also demo'd the Java Store...showed how easy it is to get involved and perhaps make a little $$ on the side...
Mark Reinhold's proposed OpenJDK Project Lambda has been approved:
The goal of this Project is to formulate a proposal to add first-class functions, function types, and lambda expressions (informally, "closures") to Java, and to implement a prototype suitable for inclusion in JDK 7 so as to enable broad experimentation. If all goes well then this will serve as the basis of a language-change JSR which will, in turn, be proposed as a component of the eventual Java SE 7 JSR...
One of the new features of Glassfish V3 is directory deployment of ruby applications. This makes is much easier to develop and deploy ruby applications on Glassfish since developers no longer need to package ruby apps as wars using goldspike or warbler as was required for Glassfish V2. However there are other good reasons to run your rails applications on Glassfish V3. One of those reason is performance...
For the upcoming semester, I want to run a learning management system into which I can integrate an experimental feature for evaluating student programs. It needs to be open source so that I can modify it. I was first going to go with Sakai, which is based on Java, but just about everyone else is going to Moodle, and there are reasons for that. The problem is, Moodle is written in PHP, and I am not a LAMP guy. I run Java, PostgreSQL, OpenSolaris, and GlassFish. (Thanks Sun for donating the server!) What's a JPOG guy going to do? ...
In the past few month several Java EE 6 related JSRs (Java Specification Requests) have been finalized. The final ballot for them ended on November 30 and all were approved. Today, December 10, 2009, Java EE 6 and GlassFish v3, THE reference implementation of Java EE6, are released. Four and a half year after the release of Java EE 5 we enter the next Java EE era. GlassFish v3 is the first application server that fully supports all Java EE 6 technologies. The list of supported technologies includes, but is not limited, by...
In the Forums, rsoika has a problem with Glassfish v3 - EAR/Web Service deployment failed?: "Hi, I have a question about the right deployment of EARs with shared libs. My EAR which deploys successfully in Glassfish v2 can not be deployed with GlassfishV3. I got the following error message during deployment: ..."
shlee4851 wonders How to captual http request header using java proxy: "I write a java proxy to intercept all the request from apache server to tomcat server. I need to capture all the request header to do some filtering and redirection. I face an issue is BufferedInputStream don't know when the end of file. at..."
And aliatis finds that JVoiceBridge not works at all. JProvino, please, take a look.: "I have disabled user password of asterisk (user name is 37) and tried to call outside my network to PSTN. That doesn't work. Where is place to put my username in softphone or jvoicebridge?. Office's ip network works fine..."
Our current Spotlight is parts 2 and 3 of the Chris Wright and James Weaver article series "What's New in JavaFX 1.2 Technology." Both articles were published in November on the Sun Developer Network. Part 2 covers RSS, Storage, and Charts. Part 3 covers JavaFX Charts in greater detail. Thanks to Janice Heiss for pointing us to the latest additions to this series.
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