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Wednesday Jun 30, 2004

No time to blog

As you can see, so far, I have not been able to blog much of JavaOne. I just haven't have the time. The talks last all day long and run right through lunch. The Birds of a Feather sessions run until just past midnight. Blogging is not the only thing I haven't been doing. I haven't taken any pictures, I haven't collected any vendor schwag, I haven't done any sight-seeing, and I haven't been staying out all night drinking. I have been enjoying the technical sessions and taking some notes, so perhaps I'll post a trip report here once the conference is over.

They grow up faster while you are away

Whenever I'm away from my boys, even for a couple of days, I find that when we are re-united, the little guys look like they've each grown a year. Andi sent me the picture below and, sure enough, Leo (who just turned 2) is looking like such a big boy and not the baby that he was only the week before.

JavaOne is fun, but I miss that little guy (and you guys too, Alex and Linus).

Tuesday Jun 29, 2004

Looking Glass under GPL, really?

I knew that Project Looking Glass was going to become open source software, but I was a little surprised to hear Scott McNealy mention, during his JavaOne keynote, that it would be released under GPL. Was that a slip up?

Sun's Jonathan Schwartz is bogging with Roller.

Tim Bray says that it's no big deal that Sun's Chief Operating Officer is blogging, but it is a pretty big deal to me as he is using Roller. Now, if only James Gosling would give up his home grown blog software and move over to blogs.sun.com I could die a happy man ;-)

The blogger meetup was a blast.

The blogger meet-up was great fun and it was great to put faces to so many names, as they say. I'm not going to try to list all of the bloggers that showed up, I'm still dragging from the IPAs I consumed, but I will link to Raible when he does that.

Monday Jun 28, 2004

Apple to bundle Blojsom.

Lots of good news concerning David and Mark today as Apple announces that they will be bundling the Blojsom blog software with Apple OS X Server.

JSF is too hot.

Today's JSF talk was so jam packed that I could not get in and now I'm sitting in a talk about the Netbeans rich client platform, which is less than half full. Oh well. I've seen three talks on JSF from David Geary in the past couple of months, so I probably know more than I need to know about JSF, especially since I am not using at work on in Roller (yet).

JavaOne 2004 opening session

Still being on east coast time, I couldn't sleep past about 5:30AM this mornning. I headed down to Moscone early to finish planning my JavaOne session schedule. By 8AM, the people started streaming in an the wireless network went to hell in a hurry. I joined the crowd in the main session hall. I guess I have never really been to a big conference because the number of people here, the endless ocean of Java developers, is just overwhelming. Despite that, when I sat down in the hall, I found that I was sitting directly in front of Simon Brown and Sam Dalton.

The opening session was better than I expected because I was expecting marking fluff. The Jonathan Schwartz and the other execs did dish out the fluff and the goofy marketing humor, but it was pretty high-quality and well thought-out fluff. The theme was the ubiquity of Java, with a focus on the non-traditional platforms like smart cards, mobile phones, and automobiles. The message was that, if you want the code that you write to make the most impact, to run on the greatest number of devices, then you've got to be coding to the Java platform. I think they did a good job getting this message accross.

At one point, they started talking about appealing to the Visual Basic type developers and making Java easier to use. They put the word FREE up on the wall in giant letters and they started talking about Java Studio Creator. Turns out, only the 30 day trial is free and on the next slide the word FREE was replaced with $49.95. If you buy a one year subscription to the Sun Developer Network (SDN), then you'll get Creator. During JavaOne you can buy SDN for a special price of $49.95 for one year. I think these prices are fair, but I absolutely hate it when a company proclaims that a product is FREE, but then turns around and tells you that freedom only lasts 30 days. I've heard it a million times, but still, it never fails to piss me off.

Graham Hamilton's Bill Shannon's overview of the J2SE 1.5 Tiger release and Tiger's children was the best part of the morning session. After some markeing inspired goofiness involving a tiny toger cub, he gave a great overview of Tiger. He covered the Shared VM concept, the new look and feels, language ease-of-use features, and annotations. It struck me during this talk, that annotations could make a really major difference in the ways that we develop with Java. Before, we used marker interfaces and method naming patterns (getXXX, setXXX, etc.) to convey information to tools and runtime reflections, but now we'll start using attributes instead. New Java specs will define new attributes and individual Java developers can define new attributes as well. I wasn't planning on attending any of the Tiger talks this week, but Bill changed my mind about that.

That's all for now. I'm about to learn about "Using jvmstat and visualgc to Solve Memory Management Problems."

somethingme.com - Post to your blog via Instant Messenger

David Czarnecki: Good morning folks. Mark and I are pleased to announce somethingme.com. Just in time for Apple's Worldwide Developer's Conference and JavaOne.

somethingme is a set of services for information creation, aggregation and exchange across devices, protocols, and services. The first available service allows you to interact with your blog via AOL(TM) Instant Messenger.

They say that a weblog is a personal, instant, and world-wide publishing system. David and Mark are putting the emphasis on instant with the new somethingme.com service. Very cool! It should work with Roller as Roller supports XML-RPC and Metaweblog API, but I have not had a chance to try it yet. Congratulations to David and Mark!

Sunday Jun 27, 2004

I made it to JavaONE.

It took just about all day to get here and the last hour of the trip was the worst because I had to spend it in a hot airport shuttle, at the mercy of driver with questionable driving skills and the inability to remember fare that we had agreed upon. I checked into the hotel only to find that that internet access is an additional $14.95 per day. Don't they understand? Internet access wants to be free, or at least I want internet access to be free, unless, of course, I am selling internet access in which case I want it to be expensive. Anyhow, I guess I won't be spending much time in the room anyway. The conference goes all day everyday, the birds of a feather sessions don't end until almost midnight, and there is the whole city of San Francisco to be explored.

I'm in Moscone now, waiting to hook up with my co-workers. I haven't seen any familiar faces quite yet. I've got my laptop hooked up to a wall outlet and a nice JAVAONE wireless connection going. I will attempt to keep up this oh so fine quality blogging throughout the event, but I am not making any promises.

Saturday Jun 26, 2004

Tiger and Tiger, something big brewing?

Elliot Rusty Harold: I just realized something: Java 1.5, being covered at JavaOne, is code named Tiger. Mac OS X 10.4, being announced across the hall in Moscone is code named Tiger. And I've heard a couple of hints that there's something big and unexpected being announced by Sun next week with regard to Java. Could there be some as yet unreleased big news about a Sun-Apple collaboration?

Friday Jun 25, 2004

Open source Java libraries for Weblogs, Wikis, and Newsfeeds.

Prompted by the news of the Rome effort, I started taking a serious look at the various Java based Weblog and Wiki libraries last night. Starting with the list compiled by the Rome guys in What's wrong with other existing RSS parsing libraries, I started to build my own list. I expanded my list to include not only newsfeed parsing libraries, but also blog/wiki API server and client libraries. I also added a couple of clarifications and a couple of categories: 1) newsfeed parsing and producing, 2) server-side libraries, 3) client-side libraries.

It is interesting that there are two Atom API server libraries, but no Atom API client library (except for Gilmore which is just getting started). This illustrates the fact that the Atom API is new, still in flux, and interesting only to server developers at this point. Also interesting: all of the newsfeed parsing libraries parse news feeds as XML, there is no Java equavalent to Mark Pilgrim's Universal Feed Parser.

One question that crossed my mind: should Rome include a blogging client library? Posting, updating, and deleting posts via the XML-RPC based Blogger API or the REST-based Atom API is not exactly easy to do. Wouldn't it be nice to have a client library with an easy-to-use set of interfaces for this.

Here is my list of Open source Java libraries for Weblogs, Wikis, and Newsfeeds.:

Newsfeed parsers and generators
  • Informa - library for parsing and producing RSS, RDF, and very soon, Atom. Also includes database persistence layer. Established May 2002, under active development, latest release 0.5.
  • Rome - library for parsing and producing all flavors of RSS and Atom. New effort started June 2004, latest release 0.2.
  • RSSLibJ - primarily for generating RSS. Development stalled?
  • RSS Utilities - JSP tags for parsing and displaying RSS presented in a java.net article.
  • RSS4J - parser for RSS and RDF. Development stalled?
  • FeedParser - Kevin Burton's parser, drives Newsmonster.
Server libraries
  • Sandler - toolkit for implementing Atom API in a web application, includes an Atom parser. Used by Blojsom.
  • Atom4J - toolkit for implementing Atom API in a web application, includes an Atom parser. Used by Roller.
Client libraries
  • Gilmore - soon to be a full function Atom API client library, under development. Sister project to Sandler.
  • Hula - client library for programming Wikis that implement WikiRPCInterface. Associated with JSPWiki
  • Apache XML-RPC - good do-it-yourself starting point for implementing a Blogger API or a WikiRPCInterface client.

BlogLines - #1 for News and Information

- according to Time Magazine

Eclipse goes native

- Redhat frees Eclipse from the VM, via Scott Delap

Thursday Jun 24, 2004

Rome - Yet Another RSS Java API

- Sam Newman's take on Rome

ASP.Net Webforms vs. Java Server Faces

- via Oleg Proudnikov

rome.dev.java.net

- ending syndication feed hell, at least for Java developers

Where .Net shines

- The Global Assembly Cache

RSS feed for TODOs in code

- from Ben Hammersley

Wednesday Jun 23, 2004

JavaOne 2004 - Java blogger meetup

- Thirsty Bear. Be there and/or be square.

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Copyright 2002-2007, David M Johnson (dave.johnson at rollerweblogger.org)

This is a personal weblog, I do not speak for my employer.