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Blogs by Community: JXTAJXTA
Two exiting news about JXTA :-) First, the JXTA community just released an enhanced JXTA bidding (jxta-jxme 2.5) for J2ME MIP2.0. If you want to learn more about the new JXTA MIDP 2.0 implementation and check what you can do with it, check Mohamed's video. Second, Bondolo just announced the availability of a Grizzly NIO patch for the JXTA Java SE binding that is going to drastically reduce thread resource consumption when JXTA peers accept incoming HTTP connections. Great to see another collaboration between the JXTA and Glassfish(Grizzly) open-source community.
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JXSE (JXTA for Java SE/EE 5.0) 2.5 contains quite a number of exciting changes for JXTA application developers. This little series will look at a few of the important changes in the upcoming release.
One of the first major changes to occur in the JXSE 2.5 development cycle was our transition from Log4J to java.util.logging. I previously blogged here how we used Jackpot to do the conversion...
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JXSE (JXTA for Java SE/EE 5.0) 2.5 contains quite a number of exciting changes for JXTA application developers. This little series will look at a few of the important changes in the upcoming release.
JXSE 2.4 was the first version to require Java Standard Edition 5.0. For that release we used only a small amount of JSE 5 specific functionality. The requirement of JSE 5.0 was primarily about...
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JXSE (JXTA for Java SE/EE 5.0) 2.5 contains quite a number of exciting changes for JXTA application developers. This little series will look at a few of the important changes in the upcoming release.
JXSE 2.4 was the first version to require Java Standard Edition 5.0. For that release we used only a small amount of JSE 5 specific functionality. The requirement of JSE 5.0 was primarily about...
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JXSE (JXTA for Java SE/EE 5.0) 2.5 contains quite a number of exciting changes for JXTA application developers. This little series will look at a few of the important changes in the upcoming release.
One thing that's cool about working on an open source project is that every so often a community member you've never heard of will speak up and make a brilliant suggestion that even after years of...
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JXSE (JXTA for Java SE/EE 5.0) 2.5 contains quite a number of exciting changes for JXTA application developers. This little series will look at a few of the important changes in the upcoming release.
One of the most exciting new developments related to JXSE 2.5 is the new edition of the JXSE Programmers Guide that will accompany it's release. Mohamed Abdelaziz (hamada) began working on updating...
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JXSE (JXTA for Java SE/EE 5.0) 2.5 contains quite a number of exciting changes for JXTA application developers. This little series will look at a few of the important changes in the upcoming release.
JXSE provides two primary low-level message transports; TCP and HTTP. In the vast majority of cases, even for peers which are behind NAT and firewalls, the TCP message transport is used because it...
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JXTA-JXSE 2.5 stable release is just around the corner
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For the last couple of weeks the JXTA project has gone through the difficult process of moving. Moving an open source project is, in most ways, easier than moving in the real world. For one thing, we haven't had to bribe our friends with beer and pizza in order to get them to help. Seriously though, it's been a significant amount of work for everyone involved to move all of the JXTA projects from...
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A few days ago http://shoal.dev.java.net was open sourced. Shoal is a java based clustering framework that provides the foundation for building fault tolerance, reliability and availability. The Shoal project was initiated a few months ago as a collaborative effort between the GlassFish appserver group at Sun and the JXTA group at Sun.
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A "primordial" version of a PSE based Access Service for JXTA is now available.
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Joan has just started a new project in the JXTA community at java.net. His project https://juxtacat.dev.java.net/ is just starting, but looks very interesting.
Here is his description of the project: The jxta-based project, called Juxta-CAT, is an effort to use the JXTA architecture to build a job execution-sharing distributed environment. The client peers from this network can use this...
MyJXTA Collaboration ... chat, voice and video.
Today the development of Java and JXTA technology enable developers to create a worldwide network to start developing software in a different way... a decentralized way... UniNet want to enable developers to simply create application that use power of an open worldwide GRID network without thinking about all communication/grid specific functions. ![]()
There are a few things in the language which I believe most of us will agree are particularly annoying. I can think of two at the moment..
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An introduction to me and what you can expect from my blog.
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Lately there has been several inquiries about JXTA's PipeService, and companion utilities (JxtaSocket, JxtaMulticastSocket, and JxtaBiDiPipe) on JXTA's discussion lists, hence this blog to shed more light on the PipeService and utilities provided, and their inherit features.
This week the JXTA community executed an impressive triple-play releasing simultaneously, for the first time in the project history, 3 implementations of the JXTA P2P protocols: JXTA-J2SE 2.3.4, JXTA-J2ME 2.0, and JXTA-C/C++ 2.1.1. These 3 implementations are fully compliant and interoperable. Sun also announced this week that Boeing, the lead systems integrator for the U.S. Army's multi-billion dollar Future Combat Systems (FCS) project, has selected the JXTA technology to provide the P2P discovery service for the FCS global network infrastructure.
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Have you wondered whether it is possible to create a distributed Map, or a Collection over JXTA?
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Have you heard of Google's Summer of Code?
Are you a student?
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