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  • Interface21 (Spring) gets 10M VC Funding

    Interface21, the provider of the Spring Framework has announced that it has received $10 million in Series A financing from Benchmark Capital. The new funds will be used to accelerate product development and expand marketing, sales and support infrastructure to scale their professional open source offerings around Spring.

  • Using SAP4Rails to Quickly Develop for SAP

    Dan Mcweeny presented a case study at JavaOne on using Ruby On Rails and SAP4Rails (an open source SAP integration library). His group was able to create a specialized web 2.0 front end in 2 weeks without prior knowledge of Ruby or Rails.

  • A Disciplined Approach to Agile Adoption

    Ahmed Sidky and James D. Arthur present an Agile Adoption Framework. Attempting to provide a structured, repeatable and measurable framework for adopting Agile processes in a software development organization.

  • Find Memory Leaks in Your Rails Application with BleakHouse

    Performance is a major issue for some Rails application. BleakHouse is a plugin that helps you find memory leaks, without using Ruby's ObjectSpace introspection.

  • Sun CTO Bob Brewin on JavaFX Mobile and JavaFX Script

    InfoQ sat down with Bob Brewin, Sun's Chief Technology Officer, who filled in some of the blanks about JavaFX, what it means to Sun, to Java developers, and to consumers, who are the real focus of JavaFX.

  • Cool things you can do with Groovy

    With dynamic languages playing a role in JDK 6, the "Cool things you can do with Groovy" session was aimed at show casing the features of the Groovy language that can help make developers more productive.

  • Java Goes Real Time

    Yesterday at Java One Sun finally announced the first implementation of JSR-1, the Real-time Specification for Java, since it was finalized in July of 2006.

  • Is Post-Agile Just Agile?

    There's been some discussion of Post-Agile lately. Much of this discussion focuses on practicing agile principles without following a given process dogma and adapting those practices that work for a given team. But is this post-Agile or just Agile?

  • Sun Finishes OpenJDK Transition

    In today's Java One keynote Sun announced that the open sourcing of Java has been completed. There is now a completely build-able JDK available to developers at the OpenJDK project.

  • SDL.NET Offers Cross-Platform Gaming for .NET Developers

    Version 6 of SDL.NET, a high-level binding for the SDL API, has been released. This, combined with the Tao framework, form the corner-stone of MonoXna.

  • InfoQ Article: The MOle Plugin

    The MOle, so named because it acts as the investigators agent, is a plugin that provides insight into the inner workings of Ruby on Rails in realtime, as requests come in and get processed. The author describes how the plugin came about and gives InfoQ readers a detailed introduction to his innovative plugin.

  • Sun to Introduce JavaFX Mobile and JavaFX Script

    According to industry publications, Sun is slated to announce JavaFX Script at Tuesday morning's opening JavaOne keynote. JavaFX Script will target desktop, web, and mobile devices.

  • Tao Brings Cross-Platform Bindings to .Net and Mono

    While Silverlight is promising the future, Tao is already shipping. The Tao Framework claims to be a "collection of bindings to facilitate cross-platform media application development utilizing the .NET and Mono platforms." Eleven APIs are exposed to .NET/Mono through Tao bindings including OpenGL, PhysicsFS, and the Lua scripting system.

  • Solving Sudoku with TDD

    A small debate recently flared up on the merits - or lack thereof - of test-driven development. Following Ron Jeffries' attempts to create a Sudoku solver, the community explores some of the difficulties and misconceptions associated with TDD.

  • Microsoft Surpasses Java's Dynamic Language Support?

    Microsoft's announcement of the Dynamic Language Runtime (DLR) has caused quite a stir in many areas, also in the Java space. Many voices seem convinced that the DLR has given .NET a major head start over the JVM, because it solves many problems Java is only just starting to realize. We look at the current situation of dynamic language support and how it compares to the DLR.

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