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  • Tutorial on Contract-First Web Services

    Arjen Poutsma has posted a step-by-step tutorial on contract-first Web service development.

  • Tagging for Knowledge Management

    Some dismiss Web 2.0 as a new trend, not yet ready for prime time, but we should not lose sight of the fact that Ward Cunningham's WikiWikiWeb, an early Web 2.0 technology, has been an important tool for many Agile teams since 1995. Is "tagging" another opportunity to enhance enterprise collaboration through emergent knowledge categorization?

  • Microsoft Releases Insurance Value Chain Architecture Framework v1.0

    Microsoft has announced a new architecture framework to assist insurance companies in developing SOAs and deploying pre-integrated software applications around core insurance business processes.

  • Scala: combining the best of Ruby and Java?

    Like Ruby, Scala has a very terse syntax and its extensibility makes it suitable for writing DSLs, like Java, Scala is statically typed and can call Java code seamlessly without any declarations or glue code. Scala founder Martin Odersky (who co-designed Java Generics and implemented javac) has started blog today with his first entry on the history which led up to Scala.

  • BEA Workshop (formerly M7 NitroX) 3.1 Adds EJB3, JPA, Spring

    BEA a couple of weeks ago released BEA Workshop Studio 3.1, which is the former NitroX Eclipse productivity toolset that BEA acquired when they bought M7 last year. Main features of the new release is the EJB3 ORM Workbench, bundling of the Spring IDE Project and integration with Eclipse Web Tools Project 1.0.2.

  • Sowing Organic Change

    Kevin Rutherford blogged recently on fostering change, rather than imposing it, this latter strategy being more likely to backfire. He's provided three tools useful to get the ball rolling and keep it moving.

  • InfoQ Book: Visual Studio .NET Tips and Tricks

    InfoQ has partnered with Minh T. Nguyen to bring you Visual Studio .NET Tips and Tricks. The book explains how to use VS.NET efficiently, including everything from editing and compiling to debugging and navigating within the VS.NET IDE. The book covers the Visual Studio .NET 2002, 2003, and 2005 Beta 1 releases.

  • InfoQ.com Officially Launched!

    InfoQ has officially launched today, having previously been in unlaunched/testing mode since May 17th. InfoQ is a new Enterprise Software Development Community serving Java, .NET, Ruby, SOA, and Agile. Interest so far has been high, with over 19,249 unique visitors to the site. Today's launch presents version 0.7 of the site. Thank you to our members, sponsors, and authors!

  • Watir Adds Support for Modal Dialogs

    Watir is a very popular testing tool for web apps. The newest release adds support for Internet Explorer modal dialogs, which are common in enterprise applications.

  • Spring+JPA to be the next popular stack?

    Spring+Hibernate is called the most commonly used stack behind java web apps. Spring 2 now provides the complete EJB container contract for JPA, allowing JPA to be used under a Spring managed services layer (with all the AOP and DI richness of Spring) in any environment. Debates are already beginning about whether the next defacto stack will be EJB, Spring+Hibernate, or Spring + JPA.

  • Rails Powering Online Shopping Evolution

    First JadedPixel wows us with Shopify, then this week Dylan Stamat and Jonathan Siegel announce RightCart.com, a new web service that they wrote using Rails in just six weeks. Both apps are making waves in greater web universe.

  • Should We Manage Both Features and Tasks?

    Although it keeps people busy, managing tasks is neither interesting nor useful. Managing value created provides greater leverage and greater risk management. Jon Kern blogged last week on creating good features (rather than tasks) by focusing on value and testability. But do we sometimes need to manage tasks, too? David Anderson used the Theory of Constraints to back an unexpected answer.

  • Nemerle: A Hybrid Programming Language For The .NET Platform

    Nemerle is a hybrid language developed by the Computer Science Institute of the University of Wroclaw in Poland. It is a high-level statically typed language that offers functional, object-oriented, and imperative features. It has a simple C#-like syntax and a meta-programming system.

  • RubyConf 2006 Call for Proposals

    David Black of Ruby Central announced this week that the call for proposals for RubyConf 2006 is now open. There has been strong representation from the Agile community at this event in previous years.

  • Web Beans JSR 299 approved by JCP for further development

    The new Web Beans JSR 299 has been unanimously approved by the JCP executive committee for further development. Web Beans aims to integrate EJB 3 session and entity beans to be used as JSF managed beans eliminating the dual layers of web actions and EJB's common in web apps. Web Beans also defines constructs for state and workflow in the web tier.

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