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  • Oracle Brings Java to iOS Devices (and Android too)

    - by Shay Shmeltzer
    Java developer, did you ever wish that you can take your Java skills and apply them to building applications for iOS mobile devices? Well, now you can! With the new Oracle ADF Mobile solution, Oracle has created a unique technology that allows developers to use the Java language and develop applications that install and run on both iOS and Android mobile devices. The solution is based on a thin native container that installs as part of your application. The container is able to run the same application you develop unchanged on both Android and iOS devices. One part of the container is a headless lightweight JVM based on the Java ME CDC technology. This allows the execution of Java code on your mobile device. Java is used for building business logic, accessing local SQLite encrypted database, and invoking and interacting with remote services. Java concept on the UI too To further help transition Java developers to mobile developers, ADF Mobile borrows familiar concepts from the world of JSF to make the UI development experience simpler. The user interface layer of Oracle ADF Mobile is rendered with HTML5 which delivers native user experience on the devices, including animations and gesture support. Using a set of rich components, developers can create mobile pages without needing to write low level HTML5 and JavaScript code. The components cover everything from simple controls such as text fields, date pickers, buttons and links, to advanced data visualization components such as graphs, gauges and maps, and including unique mobile UI patterns such as lists, and toggle selectors. Want to see the components in action? Access this demo instance from your mobile device. Need to further customize the look and feel? You can use CSS3 to achieve this. A controller layer - similar in functionality to the JSF controller - allows developer to simplify the way they build navigation between pages. The logic behind the pages is written in managed beans with various scopes – again similar to the JSF approach. Need to interact with device features like camera, SMS, Contacts etc? Oracle conveniently packaged access to these services in a set of services that you can just drag and drop into your pages as buttons and links, or code into your managed beans Java calls to activate. Underneath the covers this layer is implemented using the open source phonegap solution. With the new Oracle ADF Mobile solution, transferring your Java skills into the Mobile world has become much easier. Check out this development experience demo. And then go and download JDeveloper and the ADF Mobile extension and try it out on your own. For more on ADF Mobile, see the ADF Mobile OTN page.

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  • Dartisans ep 12 - Dart and Web Components

    Dartisans ep 12 - Dart and Web Components Ask and vote for questions: developers.google.com Web Components are ushering in the "declarative renaissance" for modern web development. Watch this episode of Dartisans to learn how you can build Web Components with Dart, and compile them into JavaScript to run across the modern web. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • GDL Presents: Creative Sandbox | Google+ API

    GDL Presents: Creative Sandbox | Google+ API Tune in to hear about two cool, new campaigns that use the Google+ API from the core creative teams at Goodby Silverstein & Partners, Hook and RESN in conversation with a Google+ Developer Relations expert. They'll talk about how they pushed the possibilities of the Google+ API - and will inspire you to do the same. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 01:00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • No More NCrunch For Me

    - by Steve Wilkes
    When I opened up Visual Studio this morning, I was greeted with this little popup: NCrunch is a Visual Studio add-in which runs your tests while you work so you know if and when you've broken anything, as well as providing coverage indicators in the IDE and coverage metrics on demand. It recently went commercial (which I thought was fair enough), and time is running out for the free version I've been using for the last couple of months. From my experiences using NCrunch I'm going to let it expire, and go about my business without it. Here's why. Before I start, let me say that I think NCrunch is a good product, which is to say it's had a positive impact on my programming. I've used it to help test-drive a library I'm making right from the start of the project, and especially at the beginning it was very useful to have it run all my tests whenever I made a change. The first problem is that while that was cool to start with, it’s recently become a bit of a chore. Problems Running Tests NCrunch has two 'engine modes' in which it can run tests for you - it can run all your tests when you make a change, or it can figure out which tests were impacted and only run those. Unfortunately, it became clear pretty early on that that second option (which is marked as 'experimental') wasn't really working for me, so I had to have it run everything. With a smallish number of tests and while I was adding new features that was great, but I've now got 445 tests (still not exactly loads) and am more in a 'clean and tidy' mode where I know that a change I'm making will probably only affect a particular subset of the tests. With that in mind it's a bit of a drag sitting there after I make a change and having to wait for NCrunch to run everything. I could disable it and manually run the tests I know are impacted, but then what's the point of having NCrunch? If the 'impacted only' engine mode worked well this problem would go away, but that's not what I found. Secondly, what's wrong with this picture? I've got 445 tests, and NCrunch has queued 455 tests to run. So it's queued duplicate tests - in this quickly-screenshotted case 10, but I've seen the total queue get up over 600. If I'm already itchy waiting for it to run all my tests against a change I know only affects a few, I'm even itchier waiting for it to run a lot of them twice. Problems With Code Coverage NCrunch marks each line of code with a dot to say if it's covered by tests - a black dot says the line isn't covered, a red dot says it's covered but at least one of the covering tests is failing, and a green dot means all the covering tests pass. It also calculates coverage statistics for you. Unfortunately, there's a couple of flaws in the coverage. Firstly, it doesn't support ExcludeFromCodeCoverage attributes. This feature has been requested and I expect will be included in a later release, but right now it doesn't. So this: ...is counted as a non-covered line, and drags your coverage statistics down. Hmph. As well as that, coverage of certain types of code is missed. This: ...is definitely covered. I am 100% absolutely certain it is, by several tests. NCrunch doesn't pick it up, down go my coverage statistics. I've had NCrunch find genuinely uncovered code which I've been able to remove, and that's great, but what's the coverage percentage on this project? Umm... I don't know. Conclusion None of these are major, tool-crippling problems, and I expect NCrunch to get much better in future releases. The current version has some great features, like this: ...that's a line of code with a failing test covering it, and NCrunch can run that failing test and take me to that line exquisitely easily. That's awesome! I'd happily pay for a tool that can do that. But here's the thing: NCrunch (currently) costs $159 (about £100) for a personal licence and $289 (about £180) for a commercial one. I'm not sure which one I'd need as my project is a personal one which I'm intending to open-source, but I'm a professional, self-employed developer, but in any case - that seems like a lot of money for an imperfect tool. If it did everything it's advertised to do more or less perfectly I'd consider it, but it doesn't. So no more NCrunch for me.

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  • IT Job Titles ? What Do They Mean?

    Although only a few decades old, the information technology or IT field is as broad and deep as industries that have been around for centuries. IT job categories, titles and specialties abound -- so ... [Author: Allen B. Ury - Computers and Internet - March 27, 2010]

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  • Google I/O 2012 - Meet the Go Team

    Google I/O 2012 - Meet the Go Team Andrew Gerrand , Rob Pike The Go programming language is an open source project to make programmers more productive. Go is expressive, concise, clean, and efficient. It's a fast, statically typed, compiled language that feels like a dynamically typed, interpreted language. In this fireside chat, Have your Go questions answered by the gophers themselves. For all I/O 2012 sessions, go to developers.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 168 11 ratings Time: 01:00:29 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 Keynote, pt. 8

    Google I/O 2010 Keynote, pt. 8 Video footage from Day 1 keynote at Google I/O 2010 For Google I/O session videos, presentations, developer interviews and more, go to: code.google.com/io From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 1 0 ratings Time: 10:18 More in Science & Technology

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  • Are You Making These 5 Critical SEO Mistakes?

    Many people who are new to the internet business are not aware of the SEO technology. But the fact is that every niche needs SEO to bring their business in front of customers who are actively searching for information and products related to that niche.

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  • Why JSF Matters (to You)

    - by reza_rahman
          "Those who have knowledge, don’t predict. Those who predict, don’t have knowledge."                                                                                                    – Lao Tzu You may have noticed Thoughtworks recently crowned the likes AngularJS, etc imminent successors to server-side web frameworks. They apparently also deemed it necessary to single out JSF for righteous scorn. I have to say as I was reading the analysis I couldn't help but remember they also promptly jumped on the Ruby, Rails, Clojure, etc bandwagon a good few years ago seemingly similarly crowing these dynamic languages imminent successors to Java. I remember thinking then as I do now whether the folks at Thoughtworks are really that much smarter than me or if they are simply more prone to the Hipster buzz of the day. I'll let you make the final call on that one. I also noticed mention of "J2EE" in the context of JSF and had to wonder how up-to-date or knowledgeable the person writing the analysis actually was given that the term was basically retired almost a decade ago. There's one thing that I am absolutely sure about though - as a long time pretty happy user of JSF, I had no choice but to speak up on what I believe JSF offers. If you feel the same way, I would encourage you to support the team behind JSF whose hard work you may have benefited from over the years. True to his outspoken character PrimeFaces lead Cagatay Civici certainly did not mince words making the case for the JSF ecosystem - his excellent write-up is well worth a read. He specifically pointed out the practical problems in going whole hog with bare metal JavaScript, CSS, HTML for many development teams. I'll admit I had to smile when I read his closing sentence as well as the rather cheerful comments to the post from actual current JSF/PrimeFaces users that are apparently supposed to be on a gloomy death march. In a similar vein, OmniFaces developer Arjan Tijms did a great job pointing out the fact that despite the extremely competitive server-side Java Web UI space, JSF seems to manage to always consistently come out in either the number one or number two spot over many years and many data sources - do give his well-written message in the JAX-RS user forum a careful read. I don't think it's really reasonable to expect this to be the case for so many years if JSF was not at least a capable if not outstanding technology. If fact if you've ever wondered, Oracle itself is one of the largest JSF users on the planet. As Oracle's Shay Shmeltzer explains in a recent JSF Central interview, many of Oracle's strategic products such as ADF, ADF Mobile and Fusion Applications itself is built on JSF. There are well over 3,000 active developers working on these codebases. I don't think anyone can think of a more compelling reason to make sure that a technology is as effective as possible for practical development under real world conditions. Standing on the shoulders of the above giants, I feel like I can be pretty brief in making my own case for JSF: JSF is a powerful abstraction that brings the original Smalltalk MVC pattern to web development. This means cutting down boilerplate code to the bare minimum such that you really can think of just writing your view markup and then simply wire up some properties and event handlers on a POJO. The best way to see what this really means is to compare JSF code for a pretty small case to other approaches. You should then multiply the additional work for the typical enterprise project to try to understand what the productivity trade-offs are. This is reason alone for me to personally never take any other approach seriously as my primary web UI solution unless it can match the sheer productivity of JSF. Thanks to JSF's focus on components from the ground-up JSF has an extremely strong ecosystem that includes projects like PrimeFaces, RichFaces, OmniFaces, ICEFaces and of course ADF Faces/Mobile. These component libraries taken together constitute perhaps the largest widget set ever developed and optimized for a single web UI technology. To begin to grasp what this really means, just briefly browse the excellent PrimeFaces showcase and think about the fact that you can readily use the widgets on that showcase by just using some simple markup and knowing near to nothing about AJAX, JavaScript or CSS. JSF has the fair and legitimate advantage of being an open vendor neutral standard. This means that no single company, individual or insular clique controls JSF - openness, transparency, accountability, plurality, collaboration and inclusiveness is virtually guaranteed by the standards process itself. You have the option to choose between compatible implementations, escape any form of lock-in or even create your own compatible implementation! As you might gather from the quote at the top of the post, I am not a fan of crystal ball gazing and certainly don't want to engage in it myself. Who knows? However far-fetched it may seem maybe AngularJS is the only future we all have after all. If that is the case, so be it. Unlike what you might have been told, Java EE is about choice at heart and it can certainly work extremely well as a back-end for AngularJS. Likewise, you are also most certainly not limited to just JSF for working with Java EE - you have a rich set of choices like Struts 2, Vaadin, Errai, VRaptor 4, Wicket or perhaps even the new action-oriented web framework being considered for Java EE 8 based on the work in Jersey MVC... Please note that any views expressed here are my own only and certainly does not reflect the position of Oracle as a company.

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  • Announcing the Drive Installation Scope

    Announcing the Drive Installation Scope On September 12, Google Drive released a new feature of great interest to many Drive web app developers: the installation scope. In this session we'll discuss the benefits of the installation scope, walk through the related documentation, and do a brief demo of how it works. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2012 - Not Just a Map

    Google I/O 2012 - Not Just a Map Josh Livni, Nabil Naghdy The Google Maps API is the most popular mapping platform in the world, but it offers developers and users so much more than just a map. In this session we'll review the wealth of additional value that the Maps API has to offer, and the essential features that developers should be aware of across a number of verticals, including real estate, travel, and retail. For all I/O 2012 sessions, go to developers.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 694 0 ratings Time: 50:50 More in Science & Technology

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  • GDL Presents: Creative Sandbox | Mobile

    GDL Presents: Creative Sandbox | Mobile Tune in to hear about a cool, new application of the Mobile platform, Big Bold: Grolsch, from the core creative team at Beattie McGuinness Bungay in conversation with a Google Mobile expert. They'll talk about how they pushed the possibilities of the Mobile platform - and will inspire you to do the same. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 01:00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • Upcoming Technical Training by PTS

    - by Javier Puerta
    See below upcoming technical sessions for partners delivered by PTS (Partner Technology Solutions): Database 12c Technical Training for Partners by PTS November 12-13, 2013: Lisbon, Portugal November 20-21, 2013: Dubai, UAE November 26-27, 2013: Riga, Latvia December 11-12, 2013: Hertzliya, Israel Oracle 12c Database In-Memory Session Beta event  November 26, 2013: Munich, Germany November 28, 2013: Reading, England Upgrade Your Solution to Oracle Database 12c November 26-27, 2013: Athens, Greece To register for any of the above sessions please contact your local enablement manager. 

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  • Upcoming Technical Training by PTS

    - by Javier Puerta
    See below upcoming technical sessions for partners delivered by PTS (Partner Technology Solutions): Database 12c Technical Training for Partners by PTS November 12-13, 2013: Lisbon, Portugal November 20-21, 2013: Dubai, UAE November 26-27, 2013: Riga, Latvia December 11-12, 2013: Hertzliya, Israel Oracle 12c Database In-Memory Session Beta event  November 26, 2013: Munich, Germany November 28, 2013: Reading, England Upgrade Your Solution to Oracle Database 12c November 26-27, 2013: Athens, Greece To register for any of the above sessions please contact your local enablement manager. 

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  • Google I/O 2012 - Go in Production

    Google I/O 2012 - Go in Production Andrew Gerrand Since Go's release in 2009 many companies (besides Google, of course) have used the language to build cool stuff. In this session programmers from several companies will share their first-hand experience using Go in production environments. For all I/O 2012 sessions, go to developers.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 182 4 ratings Time: 49:45 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 Keynote, pt. 9

    Google I/O 2010 Keynote, pt. 9 Video footage from Day 1 keynote at Google I/O 2010 For Google I/O session videos, presentations, developer interviews and more, go to: code.google.com/io From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 10:05 More in Science & Technology

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  • Chrome Apps Office Hours: TextDrive and AngularJS

    Chrome Apps Office Hours: TextDrive and AngularJS Ask and vote for questions: goo.gl In this episode, the AngularJS team joins us to talk about how they used Angular to build TextDrive. TextDrive is an open source text editor application that demonstrates of the power and simplicity of AngularJS and Chrome Apps. It features integration with Google Drive, web intents, and Ace (ace.ajax.org) in a simple and clean interface built upon HTML5 and web standards. To learn more visit github.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • Browser window size statistics?

    - by Litso
    I was wondering, are there any statistics available on what size users have their browser set to nowadays? I know the screen resolutions (we have analytics, which shows those as well) but I doubt a lot of people with 1280*xxx and higher still browse full-screen though. My boss is determined to keep our website 900px wide though, because that way people with 1800*xxx resolutions can have two browser windows next to eachother without having to scroll horizontally. I have never seen anyone browse with two adjacent browser windows like that except here at my current job, so I'm kind of doubting whether this is the best decision or just his personal preference. Anyone that can help out here?

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  • Read how a customer uses Oracle NoSQL Database

    - by Jean-Pierre Dijcks
    For those who have had the pleasure to be in SF for Oracle Openworld, you might have seen or heard about this story already. If you did not, here is a great story on how to use Oracle NoSQL Database. Apart from all the cool technology, I'm just excited that this is a company founded by a football international and dealing with sports data, games and other cool things. Like an all things cool combo in one place.

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  • Google+ Platform Office Hours: A Movember of Metro-style Apps!

    Google+ Platform Office Hours: A Movember of Metro-style Apps! This week join Google+ Developer Relations team members Joanna Smith, Jonathan Beri, Silvano Luciani, and Gus Class for a special Movember GDL. We'll share updates for Google+, demonstrate Google+ Metro style apps integration in C#, and answer any questions you ask in the event and live YouTube comments. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 30:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O Sandbox Case Study: DayZipping

    Google I/O Sandbox Case Study: DayZipping We interviewed DayZipping at the Google I/O Sandbox on May 10, 2011. They explained to us the benefits of integrating with Google Maps. DayZipping is a website where users can find and share day trips for a variety of popular destinations. For more information about developing on Google Maps, visit: code.google.com For more information on DayZipping, visit: www.dayzipping.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 33 0 ratings Time: 02:09 More in Science & Technology

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  • Microsoft sort un plug-in "Windows Azure pour Eclipse" pour faciliter le déploiement d'applications Java sur son Cloud

    Microsoft sort un plug-in Windows Azure pour Eclipse Pour faciliter le déploiement d'applications Java sur son Cloud Les développeurs Java peuvent désormais utiliser l'environnement de développement Eclipse pour le paquetage et le déploiement des applications Java sur la plate-forme Cloud de Microsoft Windows Azure. Microsoft vient de dévoiler la version CTP (Community Technology Preview) du plugin « Windows Azure for Eclipse ». Ce plugin offre aux utilisateurs une interface graphique pour la configuration et l'accès distant aux applications afin d'assurer leurs maintenances, des fonctions pour la validation du schéma et de l'auto-complétion pour les fichiers de configuration Azure...

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