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  • RSF released with support for DWR-style Ajax

    The Reasonable Server Faces (RSF) project recently released version 0.7.2. RSF is a web framework based on Spring and covering much of the same ground as JSF. RSF advocates zero server state designs.

  • Getting started with Rubinius development

    Rubinius is quickly gathering interest and is coming close to full Ruby support. We take a look at Rubinius development, what to check out and where to start.

  • Windows Presentation Foundation Unleashed - Review and Sample Chapter

    WPF Unleashed by Adam Nathan has been leading the Amazon charts in positive reviews, so we thought we would take it for a spin. Turns out, the book lives up to the hype. In addition, InfoQ was able to obtain the most important chapter of the book. Chapter 3 includes coverage of WPF's property and event system, a system that is unlike anything else on the Windows platform.

  • Apache Tuscany Released as First 1.0 SCA Implementation

    The the Apache Software Foundation has released the first 1.0 implementation of the Service Component Architecture (SCA), Apache Tuscany 1.0. SCA is a set of specifications aimed at simplifying SOA Application Development which are being standardized at OASIS as part of Open Composite Services Architecture (Open CSA).

  • The ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit Has Been Updated

    The AJAX Control Toolkit for ASP.NET 2.0 has been updated. Nothing new was added, but the bug fixes are sure to be welcome. In related news, a VS 2008 Beta 2 compatible version was also released with a couple of interesting features. And in case you did not know, they are now accepting patches.

  • Halo 3 Site Demonstrates Flaws in SilverLight

    With all the buzz about Halo 3, Microsoft couldn't help but to use it as an excuse to make users download SilverLight. But like Flash, it has some serious flaws.

  • Behind Microsoft's Astoria REST Framework

    In Microsoft's Architecture Journal issue 13, Pablo Castro talked about several key features of the Microsoft’s REST Framework – Astoria.

  • LiquiBase adds Diff, Eclipse Plugin, Support for Additional Databases

    LiquiBase, the database refactoring/migration tool, has had a busy year. Building on the momentum of the 1.0 release LiquiBase added two more minor releases and some point releases, adding support for database diffs, an Eclipse plugin and support for additional databases.

  • Selenium Grid: Web Testing in Parallel

    Pervasive user-interface/acceptance testing can be a drag on test and therefore build speed. Selenium Grid offers the ability to run Selenium tests in parallel on one machine or on a farm of machines in a reliable, easy-to-use way. InfoQ speaks with the Selenium Grid team.

  • Abstracting Data Query in Ruby with Ambition Ambition

    The .NET community is familiar with the general purpose query facilities added to the .NET Framework by the project LINQ. Ruby was missing such an abstraction layer. Chris Wanstrath brings his own solution: Ambition.

  • Interview: Peter Kriens discusses OSGi

    OSGi is a Java modular development specification. OSGi is used in a wide variety of applications, from mobile phones to enterprise servers and the Eclipse IDE. In this interview, Peter Kriens explains where OSGi came from, what sorts of applications it's useful for, integration with Spring, the JSR 277/294 debate, and the future of OSGi.

  • The Software Architecture Impact of the Multi-Core Processor Trend

    A JDJ article explains that as we move towards Multi-Core processor architectures, single threaded performance improvement is likely to see a significant slowdown over the next one to three years. In some cases, single-thread performance may even drop. This in turn will require software developers change the way we develop software, increasing our utilization of parallel execution architectures.

  • Upcoming Consumer JRE Seeks to Jumpstart Desktop Java

    At JavaOne, along with JavaFX announcement, Sun's Ethan Nicholas and Denis Gu presented a session providing some details of their work on the consumer JRE that is expected to ship during 2008. Not all of the details are available yet, but it is clear that this marks a significant shift of focus within Sun towards the desktop and end user experience.

  • jMaki Ajax Framework Releases 1.0 with Support for Java, PHP, and Ruby

    Today the jMaki project released version 1.0. jMaki is a client/server framework for creating Web 2.0 applications. InfoQ recently had the pleasure of interviewing jMaki's lead developer Greg Murray to discuss the upcoming release.

  • Spell Checker Added to Visual Studio 2008

    The Code Analysis team at Microsoft has decided to include FXCop's spell checker in Visual Studio 2008.

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