The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20160316133825/https://blogs.oracle.com/java/tags/javaee

Tuesday Mar 15, 2016

JAX-RS and Hypermedia

How to build a Hypermedia-Driven RESTful Web Service. Sebastian Daschner describes different approaches to realize RESTful services with JavaEE 7 and JAX-RS. Watch his presentation as he shows best practices and different frameworks that accelerate your development.

Thursday Mar 03, 2016

Java SE 8 for Java EE Developers

Which Java SE 8 APIs should you use in your Java EE 7 applications? It’s been two years since Java SE 8 was released, and Java EE 7 has been around almost three years. How can you combine both technologies and boost your productivity? Of course your application server provider should support both technologies.

In his presentation, David Delabasse explains how to use eight Java SE APIs that will help you with your Java EE applications. He shows a demonstration on how to implement each of the following Java SE libraries: Date and Time APIs, JPA converters, Java Server Faces, annotations, optional, string joiner, stream API, and Nashorn Javascript Engine. 

This presentation is part of the next Virtual Technology Summit sponsored by the Oracle Technology Network. Register! It is free. For your convenience, we offer the event in three time zones as follows: 
  • Americas - March 8th- 9:30am to 1:00 PST - Register
  • APAC - March 15th - 9:30am to 1:00pm IST - Register
  • EMEA - April 5th - 9:30am to 1:00pm BST - Register
This VTS provides two tracks on Java SE and Java EE with six hands-on sessions. Check out the full VTS agenda here  

Thursday Feb 18, 2016

Writing Web Apps

By Java Magazine Editor Andrew Binstock

Welcome to the January/February issue of Java Magazine whose focus is on developing Web applications. Not so long ago, this topic would require us to cover and compare innumerable Java frameworks. But as Web apps have turned increasingly to microservices in their architecture and REST for their APIs, the need for heavyweight frameworks has decreased significantly. By and large, Spring remains the principal widely used framework. And so, we cover its latest incarnation, Spring Boot, in a lengthy tutorial, which highlights how easy it makes creating Web apps. 

A companion examination of the JAX-RS library, with emphasis on lesser used capabilities that you might not realize it offers, is also included. And for readers who use some form of xFaces for the Web part of the app, we dig into OmniFaces, a well-designed utility library that integrates easily with JSF, MyFaces, PrimeFaces, RichFaces, etc.

[Read More]

Wednesday Feb 17, 2016

Java EE 7 in Action

In this JavaOne session, Reza Rahman gives an overview of Java EE 7 features, and guides you through a tutorial of an open source project called Cargo Tracker. The Cargo Tracker application tracks shipping containers going through different ports. The application is good example of an applied domain driven design blueprint using Java EE. Watch additional JavaOne sessions online!

Tuesday Jan 12, 2016

New Java Champion Rajmahendra Hegde

Welcome to the new Java Champion Rajmahendra Hegde!

Raj, a Java developer since 2000, is an Agile practitioner, a community organizer, an open source contributor, the founder of Chennai JUG leader and the current leader of JUG Hyderabad. JUG Chennai has been one of the most active JUG in India with Java developers contributing to technology like JavaFX, ScalaFX,  and Adopt-a-JSR. 

Raj is also a JCP member and has encouraged developers to contribute in Adopt-a-JSR. He received the 13th JCP Award in 2015 for Outstanding Adopt-a-JSR Participant. He is a member of expert groups for Units of Measurement API (JSR 363); Money and Currency API (JSR 354) and Contexts and Dependency Injection 2.0 (JSR 365)

Raj is a contributor for a number of open source projects including Visage, JBoss Forge, eWidgetFX, JRebirth, JavaKone, FXPlayGround, Frege, JBake. He also contributed to Social Media API (JSR 357) . He is a NetBeans DreamTeam Member and evangelizes NetBeans at many JUGs and conferences. 

You can follow him at @rajonjava(https://twitter.com/rajonjava)

Thursday Dec 17, 2015

Java Books in 2015

Whether you are looking for gifts or plan to catch up on reading over the holidays, there are many Java programming books available. Most of the authors are well-known leaders in the Java Community and famous writers with several programming books under their belts 

Java: The Legend by Ben Evans
Introducing Java 8 by Raoul-Gabriel Urma
Minecraft Modding with Forge by Aditya Gupta, Arun Gupta
Java Programming 24-Hour Trainer, 2nd Edition by Yakov Fain
Pragmatic Unit Testing in Java 8 with JUnit by Jeff Langr, Andy Hunt, Dave Thomas
Beginning Java Programming by Bart Baesens, Aimee Backiel, Seppe vanden Broucke
Java EE 7 Development with NetBeans 8 By David R. Heffelfinger
Functional Programming in Java by Venkat Subramaniam 
JavaFX Essentials by Mohamed Taman

If I missed anything that you wish to recommend, please suggest additional book titles as a comment.

Thursday Dec 10, 2015

Certification Discount ends December 31

Get 20% off any Java certification exam until December 31! Don’t miss this great opportunity to get Java certified and show off your credentials. 

How to get started 

1. Find the Java exam that meets your skill level and experience.
2. Review exam preparation and topics.
3. Register at Pearson VUE. Use promotion code Java20 to receive the 20% discount.

This globally available offer is open until December 31, 2015. 


Wednesday Oct 14, 2015

Java Champions Speaking at JavaOne 2015

Java Champions will present dozens of sessions this year again at JavaOne! They are an exclusive group of passionate Java technology and community leaders, nominated by the Java community. They are seasoned developers and architects with in-depth knowledge about development.  

These top speakers share their know-how in all the JavaOne tracks including client, core Java platform, Internet of Things, JVM languages, security, tools, server-side, cloud and methodology.  

This year, we created a dedicated page on the JavaOne site where you can easily find the sessions presented by Java Champions. You can find out about their sessions by day and read the session abstract.  JavaOne is your chance to learn from the greatest number of Java Champions! 

Wednesday Aug 26, 2015

New Java Champion Vinicius Senger

Welcome to the new Java Champion: Vinicius Senger 

Vinicius Senger is the founder of Globalcode, a company teaching programming to trainers and professionals.

He has 20 years of experience in programming. His first Java app ran in HPUX capturing SNMP data from the network and storing in Sybase. He did a number of projects with J2EE for financial services and banks using web components, EJB, JMS and many different types of architectures using JSF, Seam, Spring, etc.

In addition, he wrote programs on embedded devices and created the 2011 Duke's Choice Award project called jHome Automation that uses Java EE to provide home automation using different devices and communication protocols. He is dedicated to developing Java Embedded and Java EE projects. Last year, he implemented Java Embedded for a sailboat for JavaOne 2014. He just launched Combike project, which is a Smart Helmet for bikers using camera, GPS, accelerometer and a social network behind.

He is a frequent speaker at many Java conferences around the world including Devoxx, JFokus, and The Developer Conference in Brazil that he co-organizes. He has been a JavaOne rockstar speaker for several years.

He is a regular contributor to the Java Magazine and wrote an article about device I/O for the November 2014 issue. He also authored an IoT video series in English and Portuguese on YouTube.com/java 

Java champions are an exclusive group of passionate Java technologists and community leaders who are community-nominated. Learn more about Java Champions.   

Tuesday Aug 18, 2015

Lizard Selfies with Raspberry Pi and Java EE

By guest blogger Roberto Marquez 

I wrote a Java EE app to manage the enclosure lighting for Chinese water dragons.  It uses servlets and cron to control relays attached to the Raspberry Pi GPIO pins.

Recently, I revisited the project to make use of the Raspberry Pi camera for lizard selfies.  The application listens for changes on GPIO pin connected to a momentary capacitive touch sensor.  When the selfie sensor pin goes high, a  photo is taken. Watch his demo series on YouTube. 

You can find the capacitive touch sensor on Adafruit. I did not find a Raspberry Pi camera cable in Fritzing, but a standard ribbon cable was used.  Here is a wiring diagram:

The source code is available on Github: https://github.com/onebeartoe/lizard-enclosure

The continuous integration server is here: https://onebeartoe.ci.cloudbees.com/job/lizard-enclosure/


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