Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Google Goes Offline With 'Gears' -- Google Mashup -- InformationWeek

Google Goes Offline With 'Gears' -- Google Mashup -- InformationWeek

Google Gears is an open source browser extension that lets developers create web applications that can run offline. Gears provides three key features:

  • A local server, to cache and serve application resources (HTML, JavaScript, images, etc.) without needing to contact a server
  • A database, to store and access data from within the browser
  • A worker thread pool, to make web applications more responsive by performing expensive operations in the background




Tuesday, May 29, 2007

16 Awesome Data Visualization Tools

From navigating the Web in entirely new ways to seeing where in the world twitters are coming from, data visualization tools are changing the way we view content. We found the following 16 apps both visually stunning and delightfully usefu

16 Awesome Data Visualization Tools

Java on Guice: Dependency Injection, the Java Way - Google Video


Guice is a new open-source dependency-injection framework for Java 5. It's small, fast,
all » typesafe, doesn't require you to write XML, and is already in use in several Google projects. Come learn how Guice can help make your applications simpler and easier to tes

Java on Guice: Dependency Injection, the Java Way - Google Video

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Website Grader - SEO Tool - Report For www.mydreamflight.com

Website Grader - SEO Tool - Report For www.mydreamflight.com

Ethan Nicholas's Blog: Announcing the Consumer JRE (again!)

Ethan Nicholas's Blog: Announcing the Consumer JRE (again!)

Chet Haase's Blog: Consumer JRE: Leaner, Meaner Java

Chet Haase's Blog: Consumer JRE: Leaner, Meaner Java
Recently, Thorsten Laux and I gave a talk at JavaOne 2007 about where we are and where we're going in Desktop Java. We covered the download numbers (awesome!), statistics on how many PCs have Java installed (excellent!), and highlighted various desktop applications that use our Desktop Java technologies (fantastic!). We then quickly covered some of the larger features that were implemented in the recent Java SE 6 release (which I won't go into here; check out the various blogs and articles on the topic for more on those features).

Friday, May 11, 2007

Editor's Daily Blog: JavaOne 2007 Day Three

Editor's Daily Blog: JavaOne 2007 Day Three

Let the War begin !!!!!!!!!!

Now we have

Java FX
Adobe Flex
Microsoft SilverLight

Let the War begin !!!!!!!!!!

Feature Story: The Latest Java Innovation - JavaFX

Java Answer to Flex ...or Is it ???



Feature Story: The Latest Java Innovation - JavaFX
The Java revolution, which started more than a decade ago, gains even more momentum with today's announcement of JavaFX, a new Java innovation targeted at the billions of consumer devices and computers powered by Java technology. JavaFX is a new family of Java technology-based products that will help content providers create and deploy rich Internet applications (RIA). Available today are the first two JavaFX releases: JavaFX Script and JavaFX Mobile.