As internet application architects and J2EE developers, staying on top of the latest technology
involves being well-read and staying fresh with the latest developments in the industry. This
involves frequent visits to many sites on the internet. Below are some of the sites that we frequent,
and we think you will enjoy.
The links to these web sites are intended as a convenience to our visitors. We have no control
over either the content or the availability of these sites and therefore assume no liability arising out
of their use or attempted use. If you do find objectionable material at one of these sites,
please let us know by emailing our webmaster.
java.sun.com is Sun Microsystems' site for
all the latest information regarding Java technology, products and APIs, online documentation,
as well as the Java Developer Connection.
TheServerSide.com is a wonderful online
portal for the J2EE developer commmuity, built by developers, for developers.
SourceForge.net is the world's largest
open-source software development website, with the largest repository of open-source code
and applications available on the Internet. SourceForge.net provides free services to open-source
developers.
The Apache Software Foundation provides support
for the Apache community of open-source software projects, including projects such as the Apache
HTTP Server, Tomcat, Struts, Log4J, and Ant.
JUnit.org is dedicated to software developers
using JUnit testing frameworks.
JBoss is an app-server developed in open-source
that has established a massive fan base across the world.
PostgreSQL is a wonderful industrial strength
open-source relational database distributed under the BSD license.
Hibernate Hibernate is an object/relational
persistence and query service for Java that is quickly gaining speed in the industry.
Eclipse is an open-source extensible IDE used
mostly for Java Development that is quickly making other IDEs obsolete. There are also a large
number of plugins available for Eclipse that do everything from UML modeling to XML formatting
to performance profiling at
Eclipse Plugins
and Eclipse Plugin Central.
Google. How did we ever get along without Google?
Do you have a development question? Are you wondering what's causing an exception? Are you looking
for a design pattern or maybe some sample source code? Ask Google!