- The Ancient Art of Programming » Spring Web Services: Implementing a Web Service » Spring Web Services: Implementing a Web Service
- The Ancient Art of Programming » Introducing Spring Web Services » The Ancient Art of Programming: Introducing Spring Web Services
Monthly Archives: October 2005
Daily Del.icio.us for Oct 27, 2005
- Russell Beattie Notebook: Where’s The Ambition?
- Java: Pass-By-Value! » Java is Pass-By-Value, Dammit! 🙂
- Web Services Programming Course Root Page » Web Services Programming (with Passion!) – Free course
- moo.fx – the next small thing » moo.fx – superlightweight, ultratiny, megasmall javascript effects library
- Mule – A Detailed Look at an Enterprise Service Bus by Tom Bender via. Raible Designs » Mule – A Detailed Look at an Enterprise Service Bus by Tom Bender
- java.net: Sprinkle Some AJAX Magic in Your Struts Web Application » Sprinkle Some AJAX Magic in Your Struts Web Application by Paul Browne
- Jason Zhicheng Liâ??s Blog » Blog Archive » Twelve Best Practices for Spring XML Configuration Files » Twelve Best Practices for Spring XML Configuration Files
- Web services pioneer Boubez on SOA hardware and policy
- Tag URI » TagURI.org
- The ‘tag’ Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) Scheme
dev2dev> WebLogic Server 9.0: JMS Enhancements
WebLogic Server 9.0: JMS Enhancements by Michael Hart — BEA WebLogic Server 9.0 offers enhanced JMS support, including a unit-of-order feature, flexible persistent stores, and queue browsing. Read an overview of these new features in this article by Michael Hart.
WebLogic, Weblogic 9, JMS
AJAX: How to Handle Bookmarks and Back Buttons
AJAX: How to Handle Bookmarks and Back Buttons by Brad Neuberg — The clever in-page dynamics of AJAX make for richer web applications, but they don’t necessarily tolerate the use of bookmarks or the browser’s back and forward buttons particularly well. In this article, Brad Neuberg shows off a new framework that brings bookmarking and back-button awareness to AJAX.
onjava.com, AJAX, bookmarks
Web Services and Security happenings
Found these two items on Robin Cover’s XML.org Daily Newslink.
- Web Services Security Specs Hit the Standards Track
- http://searchwebservices.techtarget.com/originalContent/0,289142,sid26_gci1137393,00.html
- http://xml.coverpages.org/WS-SX-Announce200510.html
- Vendors Forge Web Services Security Group
After years of development three key Web services security standards have finally made their way into the OASIS standards body, paving the way for master security policies and shared credentials in the service-oriented world. The first meeting of the OASIS Web Services Secure Exchange (WS-SX) Technical Committee is set for early December and the WS-Trust, WS-SecureConversation and WS-SecurityPolicy specifications will be up for review.
Microsoft, IBM, BEA Systems and other top software makers will lead Web Services Secure Exchange (WS-SX), a group to improve the way users safely exchange SOAP messages for Web services transactions. WS-SX will also define security policies for those messages….. While WS-Security provides a baseline for secure Web services communication, WS-Trust, WS-SP, WS-SC and now WS-SX provide long-running, secure Web services conversations. They also allow for Web services to expose their security requirements in a way that other Web services can understand.
WebServices, WS-Security, Security, WS-SX, SOAP, WS, WS-Trust, WS-SP, WS-SC
Daily Del.icio.us for Oct 24, 2005
- O’Reilly Radar » O’Reilly Radar: The Amorality of Web 2.0
- The Google Web Accelerator is back with a vengeance – Signal vs. Noise (by 37signals)
- The Complete List | TIME Magazine – ALL-TIME 100 Novels » TIME Magazine – 100 best English language novels from 1923 to present
Flock Disappoints
Like a lot of people, I have been waiting to get my hands on Flock as I’ve been following the hype and buzz about the latest browser. Flock, which bills itself as a social browser, is built on top of the Mozilla/Firefox code base. People that had seen it were raving about it and so I was excited to get an email yesterday that I could go ahead and download it before it became generally available today.
So I rush and download the browser to see what the big deal is all about. I have to tell you – it was disappointing. I guess I’m missing the magic that everyone is seeing here but I thought this was basically Firefox with some extensions. There is built in support for Flickr, del.icio.us and Technorati and a couple of bells and whistles that are supposed to amaze. I have Firefox extensions for most of those things.
The first issue I have is the ‘Import Wizard’ during installation. Since it’s built on Mozilla, it will let you import your browser data (bookmarks, cookies, passwords, etc) from IE, Opera and Netscape but not Firefox, which happens to be my default browser. I think this is a major issue.
Once installed and running, Flock looks like Firefox with a nice theme that has rounded corners. There is built-in support for blogging and while this is interesting, I don’t think this is any groundbreaking. There is built-in support for WordPress, TypePad and Blogger but you better not have 2 different blogs with the same name. The Flickr topbar in the blog tool is nice but it only shows you your public photos and won’t let you blog your private pictures. The Technorati tagging feature is also nice but I have a couple of WordPress plugins that allow me to do just that and so it’s not groundbreaking.
Shelf is another nice feature that I already have in Firefox with extensions. Shelf is essentially a scratchpad where you can drag links, images, text, etc and then use it in other places like blogs, etc. The cool thing was that you could highlight some text and drag it over to the shelf to save it.
As Flock is built on top of Mozilla, most of the Firefox extensions should work with a minor tweak to the install.rdf file. There are a few extensions available for Flock and I was glad to see Adblock was one of them.
The auto-subscribe to feeds feature is interesting but you can’t import your OPML files into a collection and so you’d have to surf to all the blogs you read and add them manually. I think I’ll stick with FeedDemon.
All in all, Flock is a decent browser that has potential. Firefox + extensions equals almost all of the functionality of Flock but the integration of all those features into one browser is nice, specially since they all play together. I guess I bought into all the hype and reality was a little disappointing. I know Flock is still at v0.5 and so I will stay tuned for what’s next from the people at Flock.
Flock, Firefox, FeedDemon, Flickr, del.icio.us, Technorati
Test blog entry from Flock
This is a test blog entry from within Flock
Daily Del.icio.us for Oct 19, 2005
Daily Del.icio.us for Oct 18, 2005
- Om Malik’s Broadband Blog – Microsoft’s VirtualWiFi » Microsoft’s VirtualWiFi
- Feds Want Banks to Strengthen Web Log-Ons
- David Karr’s Blog: Automatically generating ServerDebug attributes » Automatically generating ServerDebug attributes in WebLogic
- Article: The Power of JAAS: Security System Alternatives » The Power of JAAS: Security System Alternatives via TSS
- David Karr’s Blog: Book Review: Service-Oriented Architecture – Concepts, Technology, and Design » Book Review: Service-Oriented Architecture – Concepts, Technology, and Design
- Demystifying Security Standards – WSS, SAML and XACML
- Taskable RSS and OPML Browser » "Always-on" RSS and OPML menus for the Windows taskbar via. Dave Winer