May 09, 2006
JavaOne Technical Sessions
Since JavaOne 2006, Sun Microsystems announced that all of its tools--including Sun Java Studio Creator and Sun Java Studio Enterprise software--would be readily available for free, and NetBeans.org released the NetBeans integrated development environment (IDE) 5.0 with many new features. In addition, Eclipse.org announced expanded support for integration, and Oracle's free JDeveloper IDE added new features.
At JavaOne this year, check out the following tools-related technical sessions:
- Creating Professional Swing UIs Using Matisse GUI Builder (TS-4916)
- A Script for More-Powerful Java Technology-Based Applications (BOF-2455)
- Debugging Across Tiers: Advanced Techniques (TS-1878)
- Debugging and Profiling J2EE/Java EE 5 Platform-Based Applications (TS-1549)
- JSR-273: Design-Time API for the JavaBeans Specification (BOF-2994)
- Twelve Reasons to Use the Sun Java Studio Creator IDE (TS-4386)
- Unhappily Ever After: Support, Maintenance, and Troubleshooting of Java Technology-Based
- Applications in Production Environments (TS-1669)
- Java ME Authoring for the Real World (BOF-2704)
- What's New in JDeveloper (TS-1279)
- Integrated Java Technology and C Debugging Using the Eclipse Platform (TS-1011)
- Read more at http: http://java.sun.com/developer/technicalArticles/JavaOne2006/tools_top10.html
Standard Java is also available in a reduced-size form, known as Java SE Embedded. There are versions available for PowerPC-based devices, limited memory Linux-x86 devices, and other environments. Using Java SE for Embedded enables you to develop highly functional, reliable, portable and secure applications for today's more powerful embedded systems, featuring the HotSpot JVM that Java developers know well.
Posted by Eric Bruno at 08:02 AM Permalink
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