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Date: Tuesday, 01 Jan 2030 06:00

Communications Features

After more than a year of intensive development the SIP Communicator project team is proud to announce a very first alpha1 release which is now available for download. The release offers support for instant messaging and presence for the Jabber, MSN and ICQ protocols, as well as support for 1 to 1 phone calls with SIP. The application is available in packages for Windows, Linux (Fedora, Debian and others), and Mac OS X.
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Date: Wednesday, 30 Nov 2011 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

Portelligent and Semiconductor Insights published a document describing interals of IPhone 3G. Techonline described the details. (Previous IPhone 3G internals photos can be viewed here) Commuunications (3G/GSM) are on Infineon chips. One for GSM/GPRS/EDGE, another for WCDMA/HSDPA (3G). GPS module is not SiRF as we all thought. Apple uses PMB 2525 Hammerhead II. The Hammerhead II [...]
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Date: Wednesday, 30 Nov 2011 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

After successfull jailbreak of the IPhone/IPhone 3G with firmware 2.0 it is possible to install Cydia INstaller. And what is more exciting, there are many applications there, including Java. Related articles: Tutorial: install Java on the IPhone Tutorial: compile and run Java application on the IPhone screenshots are from iphoneapps.ru
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Date: Wednesday, 30 Nov 2011 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

The development sources for xpwn 0.3, the firmware 2.0 version of our cross-platform jailbreaking library/command-line utility have been pushed onto github. DevTeam tested it on Linux, Windows XP, and Windows Vista for both the iPhone 2G and iPhone 3G thus far, but since it uses the same FirmwareBundles files as PwnageTool, and we know those [...]
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Date: Wednesday, 30 Nov 2011 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

IPhone and IPhone3G do not support A2DP technology. Now they do “A2DP is designed to transfer a uni-directional 2-channel stereo audio stream, like music from an MP3 player, to a headset or car radio.” - Wikipedia. This device will work on iPhone, iPhone 3G, iPod nano, iPod Color and iPod Mini. The price is $62 at brano. Specifications: [...]
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Date: Tuesday, 30 Nov 2010 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

The objective of the phoneME project is to further expand the usage of Java™ Platform, Micro Edition (Java ME platform) technology in the mobile handset market. The goal in making these technologies available [...]
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Date: Tuesday, 30 Nov 2010 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

Here are the updates: JocStrap - Java/Objective-C connection library, version 1.0.2466-17 (was 1.0.2466-15), IPhone/Java - examples of Java applications, version 1.0.2474-15 (was 1.0.2357-14) Cydia Installer, version 1.0.2473-64 (was 1.0.2460-59) Not a huge update, but still. Just in case you don’t have Cydia and Java installed on your IPhone, follow these instructions: Tutorial: install Java on the IPhone.
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Date: Tuesday, 30 Nov 2010 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

It will be opened in Peking on the 19th of July. All personnel will speak both Enlish and Chineese, and it will be possible to get small consultations in other languages, for example in German. via DeepApple
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Date: Tuesday, 30 Nov 2010 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

Cupertine California—July 21, 2008—Apple today announced financial results for its fiscal 2008 third quarter ended June 28, 2008. Apple shipped 2,496,000 Macintosh computers during the quarter, representing 41% unit growth and 43% revenue growth over the year-ago quarter. The Company sold 11,011,000 iPods during the quarter, representing 12% unit growth and 7% revenue growth over the [...]
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Date: Tuesday, 30 Nov 2010 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

There is not much defference between Safari 1.1.4 and 2.0. But Under the hood, MobileSafari 2.0’s performance is hugely improved over 1.1.4. Everything related to web surfing feels faster, web pages consistently load faster on 2.0, both via Wi-Fi and EDGE. This has nothing to do with the new iPhone 3G hardware — this is [...]
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Date: Tuesday, 30 Nov 2010 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

Apple’s added the “Books” category to the AppStore, and has moved the e-books released by AppEngines and others there. Most of them cost $0.99. There are 115 books avaliable.
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Date: Monday, 30 Nov 2009 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

Pinchmedia recently announced new report regarding IPhone applications (take a look at the previous one here). They counted free and paid applications in each category. Guess what the results are: News and social networking are disproportionately free, since it’s difficult to charge for content that’s freely available elsewhere and social networks grow in value with the [...]
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Date: Monday, 30 Nov 2009 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

Eric Klein, vice president of Sun Microsystems, Java Marketing anounced that Sun will be developing a Java VM for the Apple’s IPhone. This JVM will be based on Java Micro Edition and will allow IPhone to launch thousands of existing and new Java applications. “Once our JVM is on the phone, we anticipate that a [...]
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Date: Monday, 30 Nov 2009 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

This is a tutorial, that shows step by step how to use installed Java on the IPhone. Just in case you do not have Java installed on your IPhone there is a tutorial how to do it. What we need is a working jailbraked IPhone with Java Installed. I used latest firmware 1.1.4, unlocked, jailbreaked and [...]
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Date: Monday, 30 Nov 2009 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

This is a tutorial, that shows step by step how to install Java on the IPhone. What we need is a working unlocked and jailbraked IPhone with Installer. I used latest firmware 1.1.4, unlocked, jailbreaked and customized by winpwn. First of all I’d like to say we all want to use legal IPhones and operators. So everything [...]
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Date: Monday, 30 Nov 2009 00:00

Java 4 IPhone

These two libraries that are needed for Java on IPhone were updated recently. Downloads are avaliable through Cydia Installer. Jocstrap is a bridge between Java and Objective-C. UICaboodle is a JocStrap extenstion for the IPhone. Both are needed to write Java applications for IPhone.
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Date: Saturday, 21 Nov 2009 09:29

Kocaeli Teknik Servis

2,5 ” Notebook Harddisk HDD,sıfır Toshiba SATA 80 GB 50 TL Sipariş için : 0262 332 34 33 MSN: online@kocaeliteknikservis.com
Author: "Kocaeli Teknik Servis"
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Date: Saturday, 21 Nov 2009 09:07

Kocaeli Teknik Servis

HP SEYAHAT BATARYASI 405389-001 90 TL Masanızdan uzakta veya yoldayken, HP 12 hücreli Çok Yüksek Kapasiteli Pil ile daha uzun süre hareket halinde kalın. Dizüstü bilgisayarınızın pil ömrünü yaklaşık 10 saat artırarak, standart batarya ile birlikte yaklaşık olarak 13 saat, şarj etmeden pil gücünden yararlanabilirsiniz.Pilinizi dizüstü bilgisayara bağlı olmadığında bile şarj edebilirsiniz. HP 12cell ultra [...]
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Date: Saturday, 21 Nov 2009 09:00

Xebia Blog » Java

I've just come back from
http://www.devoxx.com/display/DV09/Home" target="_new">Devoxx 09
in Antwerp, Belgium, a conference that will probably become known as the one in which closures sneaked back in to Java 7.
Whilst I didn't feel any particular urge to return for the day 3, there was more than enough interesting material, both technical and abstract, in the first two days for me to chew on. Here some thoughts and comments on my personal "slice" of Devoxx.

Andrew's agenda

What I saw (and, for the curious, what I missed)1:

Wed

Thu

That announcement

Yes, it's somewhat ironic that I missed the big announcement of the conference: that closures may sneak in to Java 7 after all. In fact, I had decided to forego Mark's talk in the moderately firm belief that there wasn't going to be anything in it he hadn't presented elsewhere or blogged about before. So much for instinct.
Needless to say, news filtered through pretty soon, though, and of course almost everybody has an opinion about this unexpected (to say the least) development.

Some samples2 of what they might look like

Collections.sort(strings, #(String a, String b) a.length() - b.length());
Collections.sort(strings, #(String a, String b) { return a.length() - b.length(); });
@Shared int clickCount = 0;
button.addActionListener(#(ActionEvent e) { clickCount++; });

What's buzzing

With Sun and Adobe "tier 1" sponsors of the event, it was hardly surprising to come across quite a number of JavaFX and Flex talks. Oracle's entry into the fray was slightly more intriguing, focussing as they did on new features in the upcoming WebLogic releases.

Needless to say, that was slightly more enterprisey than one is used at developer conferences; I personally was intrigued to see them starting to get interested in the deployment space with an initial offering that makes it possible to create virtual machine images from configured systems.
From what I saw, there are still some important concepts missing there (which, naturally, we at XebiaLabs are trying to address with Deployit), but it's interesting to see the middleware vendors beginning to pay attention to this.

Sponsors aside, the conference's main threads, as far as I could see, were the "usual suspects" of concurrency, OSGi, Cloud and Scala. Of these, concurrency/distributed programming and OSGi seem to be gaining a little more enterprise traction (in terms of the number of people who actually appear to be using them for real projects); Scala and Cloud remain things to be "interested in" and "play with", but still retain a slightly experimental flavour.

I can't say, though, that I came across anything that hasn't been around the conference block for at least a year. No real surprises, in other words.

Highlights

Most Professionally Thought-Provoking

Joint award here to Ivar Jacobson and Uncle Bob, both of whom presented a rather critical view of the current state of the software development industry and made some thought-provoking remarks.

The main gist of Ivar's talk was that software engineering as a discipline lacks any kind of solid theoretical foundation, lurching from (methodological) fad to fad rather than developing a cumulative body of best practice knowledge.

His approach to avoiding what he considers as a recurring tendency to throw out the baby out with the bathwater is to break methodologies such as Agile down into sets of practices. In this framework, these constitute the "atomic" entities, and supposedly make it easier to identify common features of different methodologies and incrementally improve them.

Whether the Iterative practice in e.g. Scrum is really the same as Iterative in a different methodology, or whether processes are really just "bags" of practices to which you can add others without disturbing some inherent balance, are questions left unanswered.

In any case, Ivar has drummed up a bunch of Thought Leaders and is issuing the following call to action, to which all developers are apparently invited to contribute.

By contrast, Uncle Bob's talk focussed less on the process and more on the technical side of software engineering. His central tenet: developers need to learn to behave more like skilled professionals. Which to him means, amongst other things:

  • Learning to say no (how often have you heard a doctor say: "Fff, it'll be tough, but we'll try and get your liver done by tomorrow?")
  • Demanding a right to a technical career path that suitably recognizes
    accumulated skill and experience (rather than forcing developers to become managers to progress)
  • Always aiming for a "professionally ethical" level of code quality (independent of business value)

It intrigued me to note that the attitudes that Bob was referring to are most commonly found in guild-like professions (such as law or medicine), whose practices are usually based more on experience and tradition than hard science. But let's keep the "software development: craft or science?" debate for some convivial pub session, shall we?

Most Technically Thought-Provoking

Looking back on it as a whole, Cameron Purdy's talk was no more or less than a well-delivered, knowledgable presentation on the benefits of event-driven architectures. The observation he used as an introduction, however, I found fascinating: simply learning to program is bad for scalability.

The argument goes a little bit like this: in almost all the languages you might learn as a beginning programmer, you can write something like:

  int total = 0;
  int i = 10;
  addToTotal(i);
  // now total = 10
  i = 20;
  addToTotal(i);
  // now total = 30

Trival. But hidden amongst our "natural" interpretation of what code will do are the following expectations:

  • the statements will be executed
  • the statements will be executed in the order written
  • the statements will be executed exactly once

Cameron's point is that, if you consider distributed systems, these requirements - guaranteed execution, global ordering and exactly once processing - are just about the most stringent, and hence costly, expectations one can have.

Systems which are fault-tolerant, free of race conditions and idempotent have a much better chance of scaling and distributing well, and one of these reasons this is hard is because it goes so deeply against the grain of the intuitive picture of how programs run that are ingrained right from the first line of code we write.

Best Technical Content

Trust Google to put together the talk with the most varied range of "cool stuff". Gregor Hohpe gave a very engaging presentation on MapReduce, Bigtable, Sawzall and others, interspersed with mentions of things like Bloom filters and other interesting theoretical concepts.

The common theme here was definitely trading off functionality for scalability, with the conclusion that we can often get away with much less functionality than one might expect. Sawzall, for instance, does lightning-fast distributed aggregations, but, being history-less (you only see the current row), can't even do duplicate checks.

So what do you do if you discover that the engineers over at the Mountain View chocolate factory have sacrificed even the tiny little bit of functionality you need? Can you hand back a bit of that Bigtable scalability for multi-row locks, or are you straight back to Oracle 11g?

Well, it appears that Google does have a transactional engine on top of Bigtable, after all. But that's certainly not open source!

Best Presentation

417 Expectation Failed

The prize for sheer viewing pleasure goes to Doug Tidwell's talk on SimpleCloud. Humourous, slickly presented, with a good mix of examples and concepts served in manageable chunks, I certainly enjoyed this one. Including a recurring joke (in this case, Adam Koford's set of HTTP response code illustrations isn't a new idea, of course, but this one was actually topical and funny.

In terms of the content, SimpleCloud looks like a pretty decent cloud API. Quite how useful a PHP library can be for Java developers remains to be seen; if you're looking for a powerful, concurrent Java cloud library with support for lots of cloud providers try jclouds3.

Lowlights

Most Annoying Trait

To presenters from North America, a polite request: if at all possible, please remove jokes or other references to intrinsically North American popular culture.
Having to sit through a five-minute explanation of who a particular character in an American sitcom in the 70s was, or what the point of a certain gameshow was, isn't a great start for a presentation that was supposed to begin with a quick joke and then get on to the topic the audience is actually interested in.
Thank you.

Biggest Disappointment

Working for a company that is widely known for its Agile expertise, I was looking forward to Scott Ambler's promise of investigating some of the myths and rumours surrounding Agile to the scrutiny of cold, hard statistics.
What we got, however, was a lightning dash through the self-reported results of a number of surveys, without so much as a hint of analysis or further explanation.

Whilst it's certainly not uninteresting to learn that more than 50% of Agile teams do in fact do some up-front design, what I would very much like to know is whether up-front design actually leads to more successful projects! Suffice it to say that my colleague and I left the hall with many questions and few, if any, answers, and that's not taking into account the confusing presentation of many of the numbers.

A note on Performance Talks

As you might have guessed from my conference agenda, I'm quite interested in all this concurrency and performance stuff (it probably wouldn't surprise you either to learn that I'm also trying to help with Multiverse, a Java STM implementation). But after this round I think I'll be skipping performance tuning presentations for a while.

Not that Kirk's or Holly's presentations were bad or even boring, they were simply going over the same basic "performance tuning 101" stuff that is talked about every year, at every conference.

Now, these sessions are usually packed, so there certainly still seems to be plenty of demand for learning how to get a thread or heap dump or how to write a JMeter test plan.

Naturally, I understand that, because performance tuning is so specific to the application at hand, it's difficult to give more than general information and guidance. But at the end of one of these sessions I always feel I've hardly scratched the surface of these experts' knowledge of application performance.

What I would love to attend, for instance, is session during which I could simply watch these performance experts at work, attacking the problem of tuning a real application "from scratch".
The point would not be to see to what extent the application could be speeded up - in fact, that would be completely irrelevant. But I think there would be a lot to learn from seeing how a performance tuning professional goes about such a task in practice: where to start measuring, what tools to use, how initial hypotheses are formed etc.

But of course it's also not realistic to expect people to give away the "trade secrets" that allow them to earn a living just like that.

Oh, and to all the JVM vendors out there: please consider coming up with some standardized formats for profiling information! It's such a pity to watch demonstrationns of really useful-looking tools (such as IBM's Health Center) only to discover they can't work with the data produced by the JVM your client is using.

Quote of the conference

The rumour that Mark had come up with the new closure proposal syntax on the plane over to Belgium certainly caused a few chuckles. My favourite, though, was a remark attributed to Larry Ellison, who in response to possible demands from the EU to sell off mySQL is supposed to have said: "The 'my' in 'mySQL' means Larry's SQL.".

A final note

Hats off again to the Devoxx team. Content seems to be more or less on a par with JavaOne, and yet the attendance fee is still roughly €1000 less than almost all other conferences.

It's not perfect, of course: the wireless connection is just as continuously unavailable as elsewhere, and the food-loving Belgians are unlikely to consider the catering the pinnacle of Belgian culinary tradition. But after all, for €1000 you could eat and drink yourself pretty silly in Antwerp's many good restaurants and bars, and still have enough left over for some lightning-fast internet.

For me, still the European conference to beat.

Footnotes

  1. Links to slides will be added as soon as they're available. You can also watch recordings of the talks over at Stephan's site.
  2. See Cay Horstmann's blog post for further examples.
  3. Disclaimer: I've been a bit involved with jclouds myself ;-)
Author: "Xebia Blog » Java"
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Date: Saturday, 21 Nov 2009 08:49

Matt Woodward's posterous

The preview edition of Gina and Adam's new book, The Complete Guide to Google Wave, is now available in PDF form for your offline, ebook-reading pleasure.

Google Wave is a young tool that's not terribly easy to understand for a lot of folks, but at least a couple of your Lifehacker editors are completely nuts for Wave and its potential. The DRM-free, 102-page personalized PDF of The Complete Guide to Google Wave is available for six bucks, but keep in mind that the content of our book will always be available for free at any time at http://completewaveguide.com/.

Maybe this will help me understand what Wave is actually good for!

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