Some reader favorites:
EJB fundamentals and session beans
Create a scrollable virtual desktop in Swing
Wizard API updated!
Tim Boudreau has released a new version of the Swing Wizard library (version 0.997) that fixes the WizardException bug reported in JavaWorld's recent Open Source Java Project profile. The article's examples have been reworked to test out the new, improved WizardException. Thanks, Tim, for this helpful fix!
Open Source Java Projects: The Wizard API
August 11, 1998 -- In his keynote this morning at the 1998 Inprise Conference (ICon) in Denver, Alan Baratz, president of Sun's Java Software Division, offered "Straight Talk about Java Technologies for the Enterprise."
Adding to his usual Java spiel, Baratz announced the release date for JDK 1.2 FCS (first customer ship) -- early November of this year. Had this been JDK 1.1 at this stage in its development, he said, it already would have shipped, but 1.2 must meet four new stringent criteria before it gets the thumbs up:
During the audience Q&A session, several audience members expressed concern with the 30 percent RAM increase. Baratz stressed that while the functional increase between the two Java versions is greater than transitioning from Windows 3.1 to Windows 95, the RAM footprint will be trimmed after the initial release.
Baratz also mentioned February 1999 as the release date for HotSpot, the technology that is expected to bring the performance of Java up to the level of natively compiled C++. HotSpot uses a three-prong approach to improving performance: pause-free garbage collection, adaptive optimizations, and a new threading and synchronization model. Adaptive optimizations work by making "optimistic optimizations" (Baratz's words) that a static compiler cannot do. With adaptive optimizations, a bad guess can be backed out later with HotSpot.
Finally, Baratz announced in the keynote a strategic relationship between Sun and Inprise (formerly Borland). The alliance was forged to help migrate existing NEO users to the VisiBroker CORBA ORB, and to enable the porting of Inprise development technologies (like JBuilder) to Solaris. (See Resources for a link to a story on the Sun/Inprise agreement.)
Stay tuned to JavaWorld for a full Inprise conference report.
Free Download - 5 Minute Product Review. When slow equals Off: Manage the complexity of Web applications - Symphoniq
![]()
Free Download - 5 Minute Product Review. Realize the benefits of real user monitoring in less than an hour. - Symphoniq