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Ludovic Champenois's Blog

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GlassFish V3 TP2 and NetBeans 6.1

Posted by ludo on May 04, 2008 at 04:18 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)

Bonjour,

GlassFish V3 TP2 is now available. If you want to use it, or even download it from NetBeans 6.1, just fire the IDE, go the tools->plugins menu and refresh the list of modules, you should see 2 modules, one for Java EE development and one for jRuby projects. Just watch the images to see how you can get both the NetBeans modules, and then download the GlassFish V3 TP2 runtime, and see the 2 new libraries registered by the Server: EclipseLink to do JPA entity beans work and Grizzly Comet to do cool Comet Applications...
Most of the Java EE support from NetBeans 6.1 works with GlassFish V3 TP2 (Db to JPA, JPA to JSF, jMaki, Jersey RestFul services,...) and if you are a jRuby on Rails developers, you can now select the GlassFish server as s deployment target for your NetBeans jRoR projects...

Just scroll through the following images, and you'll know everything about this new NetBeans/GlassFish integration:


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Ludo.



My my, hey hey Rock and roll is here to stay

Posted by ludo on May 02, 2008 at 08:35 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

My my, hey hey
Rock and roll is here to stay
It's better to burn out than to fade away
My my, hey hey

Out of the blue and into the black
They give you this, but you pay for that
And once you're gone, you can never come back
When you're out of the blue and into the black

The king is gone but he's not forgotten
This is the story of Johnny Rotten
It's better to burn out than it is to rust
The king is gone but he's not forgotten

Hey hey, my my
Rock and roll can never die
There's more to the picture
Than meets the eye
Hey hey, my my



If only this page could also play the music...

NetBeans IDE Field Guide book

Posted by ludo on January 17, 2006 at 09:31 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Bonjour,

I am busy, really busy, updating the J2EE chapters of  the NetBeans IDE Field guide book. The second edition should be out later this year: new exciting features like Matisse Swing GUI builder, Profiler, NetBeans RCP platform are covered. On the J2EE side,we now have Sun App Server 8.2/8.1 and current 9.0 (Beta is very soon)  support, as well as BEA Weblogic and JBoss servers, JSF and Struts Web framework, new Blueprints Solutions catalog -Ajax based-, and the Derby database support. The current edition of the book is still very relevant, so if you don't have it in your collection, you can still order it from Prentice Hall, Amazon, or Bookpool. You can also read PDF  draft chapters in English and French.

book.jpg

Ludo



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