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The Java Brand: The new Java logo was unveiled at this year's JavaOne conference. There was so much secrecy around the logo that, even though O'Reilly edits the content for java.net and the new logo sits at the top of every page, we weren't allowed to see it until the day of the launch. Never mind that one of our bloggers walked down to Moscone four days early and snapped a picture of the new logo and emailed it to all of us. The marketing idea behind the new logo is that it would go on cell phones and other devices and on shrink wrapped apps to indicate that there was Java inside. In the Java Today featured weblog, Jonathan Simon writes "as soon as my users know that I wrote my application using Java, I have already failed." » Read more
(July 18, 2003 7:17AM PT)
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Introduction To Naked Objects:
It is time to strip applications of complex UIs and give users direct access to business objects. The concept
is simple: write behaviorally complete business model objects and use generic views and controllers. » Read more
(Jul 15, 2003)
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Analyze this - A conversation with James Gosling:
For the past several years, Java's creator James Gosling has been working at Sun Labs, researching ways to analyze and manipulate programs represented as annotated parse trees, a project called Jackpot. In this first of three articles that will appear on Artima.com, Bill Venners talks with Gosling about how Jackpot can help programmers analyze, visualize, and refactor their programs. » Read more
(Jul 13, 2003)
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First Community Meeting:
java.net is itself a java.net community. We are in
the process of organizing and figuring out how to best be a community. During
this year's JavaOne conference, java.net's first community meeting was held.
Here are the unedited notes of one of the Sun employees that helped steer this
project before launch. » Read more
(Jul 16, 2003)
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Javapedia: Books for Java programmers:
Do you have a favorite book that you find has been essential for you as a developer? Add it to the list at the Javapedia Books page. Browse the list of books that others have suggested and join in the discussion or add your own to the list. Contributions go above the line and discussion below the line.
» Read more
XML Publishing with Cocoon part 2:
In this second installment of their ONJava article, Colin VanDyck and David Cummings continue their description of setting up and using the Cocoon framework. In XML Publishing with Cocoon part 2 details the code handling the login request. The learning curve for Cocoon is steeper than it might be but the authors argue that it is worth it.
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