JavaPerformanceTuning Question of the Month, October 2004
Performance options: "on occasion when we do not have access to the courses or are missing some item, we use Joseph Mocker's excellent compendium of JVM options"
Pretend the solution is simple
Time for Dr. Phil to make way for Dr. Ken
Chat Transcript: Project Looking Glass
Where did the original Looking Glass idea come from? Read the answer to this and other interesting questions about Project Looking Glass, a project that explores the next generation (3-dimensional) desktop.
A Closer Look At Java Business Integration (JSR208)
JBI proposes to eliminate vendor specific integration solutions by defining a standards based Integration framework. This week Benoy Jose digs into this new JSR that is now in the early draft review stage.
NetBeans Platform Sample and Tutorial
NetBeans Platform Sample and Tutorial
The primary audience is, of course, people who want to build applications on the NetBeans platform. I will attempt to fully document how I created FeedReader, and what each line in the manifests, layer files, and java source does, especially in cases where I had to do something ... a little bit quirky.
Something I haven't seen in ages. New material on Netbeans Platform. Good work Rich.
ClientJava.com Links(11) - Desktop Books, SwingWorker, Jabber in Java
JBother: IM Client
JBother is a Jabber client written in pure Java (1.4.x). It supports groupchat in a tabbed window, multiple resources, transport registration (so you can get on AIM, MSN, Yahoo!, and ICQ through JBother), sounds for different events, has several different skins, and should run on any platform that has the JRE installed (I have personally seen it working on Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, and OS X)...

Writing Maintainable Swing Apps?
In the heart of writing a moderate sided Swing app at the moment, and it's a jungle in there. You've got Panels, Models, Frames, Event Handlers, Actions. It's easy to get into trouble quickly.
Read the full content here.
Join us for a java.net Safari
Expand your library.
[ 08 Nov ][ News ]: JFluid/NetBeans Profiler Milestone 3
The JFluid/NetBeans Profiler team has announced the availability of the Milestone 3 release of the NetBeans Profiler, an integrated CPU, memory and thread profilerfor NetBeans IDE 3.6 and 4.0, is now available.New in this release:Support for NetBeans IDE 4.0 (Beta 2 and daily builds), while it stillworks with 3.6.Significant UI improvements. Almost all trees displaying various results in the profiler are now presented as tree tables, important data are better readable thanks to smart usage of bold/gray fonts.Complete list of improvements and bugfixesThe JFluid/NetBeans Profiler team would also like to thank all of the people who submitted feedback or reported a bug. This helps the team to provide better software for you. If you find anything that doesn't work well for you or that you miss in M3, you can report itdirectly to feedback@profiler.netbeans.org.For more information and to download NetBeans Profiler, visithttp://profiler.netbeans.org.
What about a java.net track?
As long as the JavaOne Call for Papers hasn't gone out yet . . .