The document discusses plans for future versions of the Java API for WebSocket (JSR 356). Some areas that may be addressed in WebSocket.NEXT include improved CDI integration, a low-level frame API, better support for extensions and subprotocols, tighter Java EE integration, and enhancements to the client API. The presentation also covers lessons learned from WebSocket 1.1 and takes questions from attendees.
HTTP/2 comes to Java. What Servlet 4.0 means to you. DevNexus 2015Edward Burns
It’s hard to overstate how much has changed in the world since HTTP 1.1 went final in June of 1999. There were no smartphones, Google had not yet IPO’d, Java Swing was less than a year old… you get the idea. Yet for all that change, HTTP remains at version 1.1.
Change is finally coming. HTTP 2.0 should be complete by 2015, and with that comes the need for a new version of Servlet. It will embrace HTTP 2.0 and expose its key features to Java EE 8 applications. This session gives a peek into the progress of the Servlet spec and shares some ideas about how developers can take advantage of this exciting
update to the world’s most successful application protocol on the world’s most popular programming language.
WebLogic 12.1.3 was released late last year. It brings a large set of changes including support for some key new Java EE 7 APIs such as WebSocket, JAX-RS 2, JSON-P and JPA 2.1, support for Java SE 8, WebSocket fallback support, support for Server-Sent Events (SSE), improved Maven support, enhanced REST administration support, Oracle Database 12c driver support and much, much more. In this session we will take a detailed tour of these features. In addition we will also cover updated WebLogic support in the Oracle Cloud, the new Oracle public Maven repository, using WebLogic with Arquillian for testing and well as official Docker support for WebLogic.
Towards the end of the session we will discuss what's coming in WebLogic 12.2.1 this year including full support for Java EE 7, multi-tenancy and more.
Changes in WebLogic 12.1.3 Every Administrator Must KnowBruno Borges
WebLogic 12c has evolved quite a lote since its first release (12.1.1). Now on 12.1.3 it has more to offer, optimizations for Exalogic, support of some Java EE 7 APIs and more.
HTTP/2 comes to Java. What Servlet 4.0 means to you. DevNexus 2015Edward Burns
It’s hard to overstate how much has changed in the world since HTTP 1.1 went final in June of 1999. There were no smartphones, Google had not yet IPO’d, Java Swing was less than a year old… you get the idea. Yet for all that change, HTTP remains at version 1.1.
Change is finally coming. HTTP 2.0 should be complete by 2015, and with that comes the need for a new version of Servlet. It will embrace HTTP 2.0 and expose its key features to Java EE 8 applications. This session gives a peek into the progress of the Servlet spec and shares some ideas about how developers can take advantage of this exciting
update to the world’s most successful application protocol on the world’s most popular programming language.
WebLogic 12.1.3 was released late last year. It brings a large set of changes including support for some key new Java EE 7 APIs such as WebSocket, JAX-RS 2, JSON-P and JPA 2.1, support for Java SE 8, WebSocket fallback support, support for Server-Sent Events (SSE), improved Maven support, enhanced REST administration support, Oracle Database 12c driver support and much, much more. In this session we will take a detailed tour of these features. In addition we will also cover updated WebLogic support in the Oracle Cloud, the new Oracle public Maven repository, using WebLogic with Arquillian for testing and well as official Docker support for WebLogic.
Towards the end of the session we will discuss what's coming in WebLogic 12.2.1 this year including full support for Java EE 7, multi-tenancy and more.
Changes in WebLogic 12.1.3 Every Administrator Must KnowBruno Borges
WebLogic 12c has evolved quite a lote since its first release (12.1.1). Now on 12.1.3 it has more to offer, optimizations for Exalogic, support of some Java EE 7 APIs and more.
With a strong focus on annotations, minimalist configuration, simple deployment, intelligent defaults and Java centric type-safety, Java EE is one of the most productive full-stack development platforms around today. This very code centric workshop is a quick tour of the Java EE platform as it stands today. If you haven't seen Java EE for a while and want to catch up, this session is definitely for you.
We will start with the basic principals of what Java EE is and what it is not, overview the platform at a high level and then dive into each key API like JSF, CDI, EJB 3, JPA, JAX-RS, WebSocket and JMS using examples and demos. This is your chance to look at Java EE 7 in the context of a realistic application named Cargo Tracker, available with an MIT license at http://cargotracker.java.net.
We will also briefly take a look at the emerging horizons of Java EE 8.
Reactive Java EE - Let Me Count the Ways!Reza Rahman
As our industry matures there are pockets of increased demand for high-throughput, low-latency systems heavily utilizing event-driven programming and asynchronous processing. This trend is gradually converging on the somewhat well established but so-far not well understood term "Reactive".
This session explores how vanilla Java SE and Java EE aligns with this movement via features and APIs like JMS, MDB, EJB @Asynchronous, JAX-RS/Servlet/WebSocket async, CDI events, Java EE concurrency utilities and so on. We will also see how these robust facilities can be made digestible even in the most complex cases for mere mortal developers through Java SE 8 Lambdas and Completable Futures.
Java EE 8 Presentation given at NYC Java SIG on May 4, 2017. This presentation provides the latest information on the forthcoming release of Java EE 8 in June.
JavaOne 2011: Migrating Spring Applications to Java EE 6Bert Ertman
The Spring Framework has no-doubt played a major role in evolving the way we write enterprise applications on the Java platform today. However, it is still a proprietary framework owned by a single company. The age of having to rely on such proprietary frameworks in order to develop decent enterprise applications is now over and Java EE 6 has become an even easier way to develop enterprise applications based on standards which makes it the best choice for any enterprise application. In this session you will experience how to migrate a typical full stack Spring application to a standards based, completely portable, Java EE 6 application including integration tests.
WebSocket in Enterprise Applications 2015Pavel Bucek
Presentation from JavaOne 2015.
This session, which covers use cases of JSR 356 (Java API for WebSocket) and some features of Oracle’s implementation related to enterprise applications, contains description of standard use cases and recommends optimizations and best practices for using the JSR 356 API. After that, it presents more-complex schemes involving authentication support, fallback support, and clustering.
With a strong focus on annotations, minimalist configuration, simple deployment, intelligent defaults and Java centric type-safety, Java EE is one of the most productive full-stack development platforms around today. This very code centric workshop is a quick tour of the Java EE platform as it stands today. If you haven't seen Java EE for a while and want to catch up, this session is definitely for you.
We will start with the basic principals of what Java EE is and what it is not, overview the platform at a high level and then dive into each key API like JSF, CDI, EJB 3, JPA, JAX-RS, WebSocket and JMS using examples and demos. This is your chance to look at Java EE 7 in the context of a realistic application named Cargo Tracker, available with an MIT license at http://cargotracker.java.net.
We will also briefly take a look at the emerging horizons of Java EE 8.
Reactive Java EE - Let Me Count the Ways!Reza Rahman
As our industry matures there are pockets of increased demand for high-throughput, low-latency systems heavily utilizing event-driven programming and asynchronous processing. This trend is gradually converging on the somewhat well established but so-far not well understood term "Reactive".
This session explores how vanilla Java SE and Java EE aligns with this movement via features and APIs like JMS, MDB, EJB @Asynchronous, JAX-RS/Servlet/WebSocket async, CDI events, Java EE concurrency utilities and so on. We will also see how these robust facilities can be made digestible even in the most complex cases for mere mortal developers through Java SE 8 Lambdas and Completable Futures.
Java EE 8 Presentation given at NYC Java SIG on May 4, 2017. This presentation provides the latest information on the forthcoming release of Java EE 8 in June.
JavaOne 2011: Migrating Spring Applications to Java EE 6Bert Ertman
The Spring Framework has no-doubt played a major role in evolving the way we write enterprise applications on the Java platform today. However, it is still a proprietary framework owned by a single company. The age of having to rely on such proprietary frameworks in order to develop decent enterprise applications is now over and Java EE 6 has become an even easier way to develop enterprise applications based on standards which makes it the best choice for any enterprise application. In this session you will experience how to migrate a typical full stack Spring application to a standards based, completely portable, Java EE 6 application including integration tests.
WebSocket in Enterprise Applications 2015Pavel Bucek
Presentation from JavaOne 2015.
This session, which covers use cases of JSR 356 (Java API for WebSocket) and some features of Oracle’s implementation related to enterprise applications, contains description of standard use cases and recommends optimizations and best practices for using the JSR 356 API. After that, it presents more-complex schemes involving authentication support, fallback support, and clustering.
What's New and Noteworthy on Oracle CAF 12.1.3Bruno Borges
Oracle CAF - Cloud Application Foundation - delivers top quality Java Middleware software for mission critical solutions. Find out what's new and noteworthy on CAF 12.1.3, mainly WebLogic and Coherence.
CON 2107- Think Async: Embrace and Get Addicted to the Asynchronicity of EEMasoud Kalali
This presentation covers the whole spectrum of Asynchronous processing present in Java EE through introducing a use case. The coverage starts with introducing the usecase and showing how a mix of JMS, MDB and Async Servlet can address the requirement of the use case. The session will also cover asynchronicity in JAX-RS as well as covering NIO in Servlet 3.1
WebRTC Workshop - What is (and isn't WebRTC)Oracle
A brief presentation on WebRTC and Standards delivered in Istanbul, at TAD Summit in a dedicated WebRTC Workshop. Topics include current status of WebRTC standard, a look at WebRTC supported browser, both on desktop and mobile devices
HTTP/2 Comes to Java: Servlet 4.0 and what it means for the Java/Jakarta EE e...Edward Burns
Servlet is very easily the most important standard in server-side Java. The much awaited HTTP/2 standard is now complete, was fifteen years in the making and promises to radically speed up the entire web through a series of fundamental protocol optimizations.
In this session we will take a detailed look at the changes in HTTP/2 and discuss how it may change the Java ecosystem including the foundational Servlet 4 specification included in Java/Jakarta EE 8.
Java Servlets have been around for longer than Java EE, or even J2EE. This session from the co–spec leads surveys the new features in Servlet 4.0 and puts them in the context of their usefulness in a contemporary microservices-style architecture. Features covered include
• Support for HTTP/2, including server push
• Default context path
• Mapping discovery
• Encoding clarifications
• HTTP trailers, including their relevance to gRPC
The session examines these features in light of current application development trends, such as containerization, continuous delivery, 12-factor apps, and adapting legacy apps to take advantage of cloud-native technologies.
Real-World RESTful Service Development Problems and SolutionsMasoud Kalali
This session covers some of the best practices and lessons learned and takes a deep dive into designing RESTful services.
It discusses a variety of topics, from validation and exception handling to tracing, caching, security, rate limiting, and other RESTful services topics.
The presentation is suitable for anyone from novices to advanced programmers.
For those who are developing, managing, or planning enterprise Java and business application deployments on Oracle WebLogic Server with Oracle Coherence or Oracle GlassFish Server applications, this session gives a roadmap on how Oracle is evolving this infrastructure to be the next-generation application foundation for its customers to build on in a private cloud setting. Together with Java as a Service Update you will be able to see Oracle’s vision, product plans, and roadmap for this server infrastructure and how it will be used in the rapidly maturing cloud infrastructure space. The session will help you make key decisions about running enterprise applications on Oracle’s enterprise Java server foundation.
Java Community and Overview Track - March 2016Yolande Poirier
The presentation introduced the Virtual Technology Summit in March 2016. It gives an update about Java releases and new members in the Java community as well as links to Java articles
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