Application server teams up with performance management suite.
The X-Designer utility from Imperial Software Technology allows for the rapid and automated conversion of legacy C/C++/Motif-based applications to the Java platform by recreating both the user interface and the needed back-end code.
Communication services field gets another player.
Compuware seeks to reduce development time.
News briefs from the development world.
One company's entry into a standards group is quickly followed by the exit of a competitor from another.
Want to know where to start to extend Eclipse? Dwight explains how to add a menu button to Eclipse's Workbench toolbar.
When Jefferson County, Colo., upgraded its County Address Management System (Cams), it decided to re-architect Cams in a component-based Java architecture running in a Linux environment.
It is not the new kid on the block but Java is proving time tested, and worthy of continued investigation.
Details on an effort to bring more developers into the fold.
Linux, a bug tracker, and J2EE.
News shorts from the world of programming.
In a keynote at the XML Web Services One Conference, SOAP co-author Don Box
advised XML developers to read less specs, write more apps and less code, and
to remember that humans matter.
Company offers a single environment for development and integration.
A comparison of the evolution and impact of Java and Linux.
Preview of latest version of a rapid application development tool.
A look at Sonic's updated JMS server.
Neon Systems Inc., Sugar Land, Texas, last week unveiled a monitoring/management tool designed to shed light onto the 'black hole' of legacy mainframe processing connected to distributed applications based on J2EE and .NET platforms.
Java application server leader BEA recently took a step toward addressing the problems of developers who are trying to write Java apps that use XML with the launch of XML Beans, presently available as an online technology preview.