Tasktop released the 1.7 version of its flagship Tasktop Pro Mylyn-based ALM integration suite.
Bola Rotibi looks at the evolution of software development frameworks and some of the good, and bad, that they've delivered over the years.
Agile -- especially Scrum -- rules among developers who use Eclipse, the popular open-source IDE.
XebiaLabs's Deployit 1.3 beta offers new auto-discovery features plus support for virtualized and cloud environments.
Stratos is built on the open-source middleware maker's Carbon SOA platform.
Developers at Yahoo have been working on a new interface classification system in Hadoop.
Release boosts outlook for the open source IDE now under Oracle's umbrella.
Terracotta releases Ehcache 2.1.
Instantiations' GWT Designer 7.5 is designed to allow developers to take advantage of recent Google Web Toolkit (GWT 2.0) enhancements.
VMware and Google are joining forces to make life easier for developers aiming their apps at the cloud.
Catch up on these IDE options for Web development that you might not know you had.
The JRuby community has released the latest upgrade of its 100 percent Java implementation of the Ruby programming language, JRuby 1.5.
SpringSource is acquiring data management vendor GemStone to use that company's GemFire enterprise data fabric to give developers the infrastructure necessary for emerging cloud-centric applications.
Veryant's isCOBOL 2010 adds support for Eclipse Galileo, among other changes.
VMware and Salesforce.com have joined forces to build VMforce, a platform for building and running Java applications in the cloud.
Progress Software has launched a new Type 5 JDBC driver, which the company is billing as an industry first.
Although it's clear that the iPhone platform is still the place to be for mobile developers, results from a recent Ovum survey indicate that there's a lot of development activity around all the major platforms.
VMware's SpringSource division announced today that it will be adding a newly acquired lightweight messaging system, RabbitMQ, to its implementation of the Java-based open source Spring Framework.
According to analysts at IDC, Oracle losing the "Father of Java" James Gosling this week is the least of Oracle's Java challenges.
James Gosling, the father of the Java programming language, has left his position at Oracle Corporation, he revealed on Friday in a blog posting. Gosling says he actually quit the company on April 2.