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* Also view the JavaOne2007, JavaOne2005 and JavaOne2004 Bulletin Boards *
java.net JavaOne 2008 Wiki: java.net Activities and Contributions
2008 JavaOne Conference
May 6-9, 2008
Booth # 101
Moscone Center
San Francisco, California
Are you presenting at JavaOne in San Francisco? Let the java.net community know
about it by adding information about your presentation, including a link to your presentation description
once it is online, here on this page. Don't forget to link to your own People page too!
CommunityCorner (booth #101) is back again for the fourth consecutive year!
The first ever java.net CommunityCorner (see CommunityCorner2005) was a success by any standard, and a big success for a first try. Larger in size greater in refinement each year, both CommunityCorner2006 and CommunityCorner2007 were not
to be missed. We look forward to doing it again, and, as with last year, with plenty of community participation.
Come join us in booth! The booth number will be posted here when it becomes available. As before, we will have pods where your java.net project can be demo'd, we will have The CommunityCorner Technical Presentation Stage where you can give a mini-talk and demonstration of your java.net project, and we will have the fun and goodwill of meeting other java.net members and community leaders. A limited number of passes may be available for volunteers who staff the Community Corner.
The DotOrgZone also plays an important role in the JavaOne Pavilion activities - be sure to drop by.
If you have ideas or suggestions for the CommunityCorner2008, please login to java.net and post your ideas for JavaOne in the Forum: Planning JavaOne 2008.
Technical Presentations by java.net members
(A list of ALL JavaOne Technical Sessions can be found here).
- TS-4928 - Creating Simple to Advanced Swing and SWT Layouts Easily with MiGLayout
- Presentation Description: MiGLayout? makes complex layouts easy and normal layouts one-liners. This technical session shows how incredibly easy it is to create beautiful, platform-appropriate layouts. MiGLayout? is probably the only layout manager you’ll need: It directly replaces almost all other layout managers with its vast feature set, which resembles CSS. The presentation starts with the simplest of layouts, which needs almost no layout constraints, and moves quickly toward more-advanced layout techniques. Where appropriate, it includes a comparison with other layout managers, such as Karsten Lentsch’s JGoodies FormLayout?. You will learn how to enable resolution independence in your applications today, leveraging MiG? Layout’s automatic support for HiDPI? displays. The speaker promises that when you are leaving this session, you will rather reimplement a panel by using MiG? Layout than edit a single GridBagConstraint?.
- Date and Time: TBD
- Room: TBD
- Presented by: Mikael Grev
- TS-6385 - Integration Profile for GlassFish?™ Project v3
- Presentation Description: The landscape of traditional application development is littered with applications designed and implemented to run on an island and be deployed into an operational environment requiring coordinated management and communication among multiple applications. Two significant architectural trends have emerged to address this problem: modularity and service-oriented architecture. Generally speaking, modularity provides a clean way to address dependency concerns for an application while providing a level of isolation between application modules. SOA provides a blueprint for the description of service contracts and a communication contract between a service consumer and a provider. Taken together, these two technologies provide a strong foundation for an application integration platform. This session examines the use of GlassFish?™ project v3 and Java™ Business Integration (JBI) as a modular SOA platform for application integration. The module system at the core of v3 serves as a lightweight kernel for hosting applications and application containers. The JBI implementation in GlassFish? project v3 can be used from within these application containers to facilitate interapplication and intercontainer communication in an interoperable manner. Composite application developers are free to choose the domain language and technology to fit their specific problems.
- Date and Time: TBD
- Room: TBD
- Presented by Keith Babo and Andreas Egloff
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Hands On Labs by java.net members
(A listing of ALL JavaOne HOLs can be found here).
- HOL-6998 - JavaFX Applications: Rich Client Applications with Cool Effects
- Track: Hands-On Labs; Rich Media and Content
- JavaFX?™ technology has taken the Java™ technology world by storm, because its declarative style and compositional programming behavior made it ideal for designing richer GUIs than was possible for a traditional programmer on the Java platform using different layout managers, callbacks, and so on. Because the JavaFX? programming language is evolving, this Hands-on Lab starts with a quick overview of the language, looks at some of the changes since last year, and covers the newer deployment features. It also looks at how to design some really rich applications by using scenegraphs, animation, media, and other effects and then Java OpenGL? (JOGL), the Java 3D API, and other libraries on the Java platform. After attending this lab, attendees will be able to walk away with a very good idea of how to use JavaFX? technology for designing compelling rich client applications that incorporate graphics and other effects such as media and animation.
- Date/Time: TBD
- Presented By: Sridhar Reddy and Raghavan Srinivas
- LAB-3410, Metro: Try Out Simple and Interoperable Web Services
- Track: Hands-On Labs; Java Platform, Enterprise Edition
- Presentation Description: Metro is a high-performance, extensible, easy-to-use web service stack. You can use it for every type of web service, from simple to reliable, secured, and transacted web services that interoperate with .NET services. Metro bundles stable versions of the JAX-WS (Java™ API for XML Web Services) reference implementation and WSIT (Web Services Interoperability Technology).JAX-WS is a fundamental technology for developing SOAP-based and RESTful Java technology-based web services. WSIT enables secure, reliable interoperability between Java technology-based web services and Microsoft’s Windows Communication Foundation. This Hands-on Lab starts by developing a simple Metro web service and showing how to enhance this web service with Metro features such as reliability and security. The next part of the lab enables a web service client with Metro security features and has it interoperate with the previously built service. The lab shows the ease of development the NetBeans?™ 6.0 release provides for achieving this. The lab uses the NetBeans? 6.0 release to modify and configure both the web service and the client, using Sun’s GlassFish?™ project application server as the container. The lab uses WS-Reliability and WS-Security as examples of Metro’s secure, reliable features.
- Date and Time: TBD
- Presented by: Carol McDonald? and Fabian Ritzmann
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BOFs by java.net members
(A listing of ALL JavaOne BOFs can be found here).
- BOF-6620 - Robot Fusion: Mobile Robots and Sun™ SPOTs Collaborate to Hunt Humans
- Description: In the demonstration task, a robot swarm moving in a networked array of Sun SPOT sensors detects a moving warm-bodied object and pelts it with soft foam disks. This presentation shows some of the details of the foam disk gun, the robot platform, and the system architecture. (More details here)*
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- Presented by: Bruce Boyes (Systronix) and Jim Wright (RoboWright?)
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- BOF-####, Birds of a Feather Session Title, Presentation Description (short). Date and Time, presented by ??
CommunityOne Day presentations by java.net members
(A listing of all CommunityOne sessions can be found here). It's free to attend, whether or not you are going to JavaOne, but registration is limited - so sign up now if you plan to attend.
http://developers.sun.com/events/communityone/
- Session-S297127 - TrackBot™, Greenfoot, and Sun™ SPOT: Simulated and Physical Robots for Education from Upper Grade School to University Level
- * This session presents the work the speaker and his colleagues are doing to combine a small, affordable, mobile robot (TrackBot) and an easy-to-use Java IDE and simulation environment usable even by grade school students (Greenfoot) and a small wireless Java™ technology-based controller with sensors (Sun™ SPOT [Small Programmable Object Technology], www.sunspotworld.com).*
- Date and Time: Monday May 05
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- Presented by: Bruce Boyes (Systronix) and Shawn Silverman?
Pods in the JavaOne Pavillion
- Java.net CommunityCorner ........ java.net mini-talks #TBD
- Robotics Including RoboHACC? Contest Pod #TBD
- Community , Pod #TBD
- Community , Pod #TBD
- Community , Pod #TBD
Other java.net Activities or Events at JavaOne
Site Tools of the Javaone Web
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