Five important reasons to move to the Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition (J2SE platform) 5.0, supported by data and references to prove that the 5.0 release will reduce development and runtime costs.
Tutorial Details:
This article provides five important reasons to move to the Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition (J2SE platform) 5.0. Each reason is supported by data and references to prove that the 5.0 release will reduce development and runtime costs.
J2SE 5.0 (codenamed Project Tiger) was released at the end of September 2004. It is one of the most significant updates to the Java platform in many years. The Java community has eagerly welcomed its new features, yet these new features are not what makes the release special. What does? The platform was subjected to a higher level of testing than any previous version, to prepare it for mission-critical production.
Given the wealth of improvements in J2SE 5.0, choosing the top five reasons for this article was a tough task.
Read
Tutorial at: Click here to view the tutorial
Rate Tutorial: Five Reasons to Move to the J2SE 5 Platform
View Tutorial: Five Reasons to Move to the J2SE 5 Platform
Related
Tutorials:
Programming Java threads in the
real world, Part
5 - JavaWorld -
February 1999
Programming Java threads in the
real world, Part
5 - JavaWorld -
February 1999 |
Add drag and drop to your JTrees - JavaWorld Tip
97
Add drag and drop to your JTrees - JavaWorld Tip
97 |
J2ME: The next
major games
platform? - JavaWorld March 2001
J2ME: The next
major games
platform? - JavaWorld March 2001 |
Performance books put to the test - JavaWorld March 2001
Performance books put to the test - JavaWorld March 2001 |
J2SE 1.4
premieres Java's assertion
capabilities, Part
1
J2SE 1.4
premieres Java's assertion
capabilities, Part
1 |
J2SE 1.4
premieres Java's
assertion capabilities, Part 2
J2SE 1.4
premieres Java's
assertion capabilities, Part 2 |
Java security evolution
and concepts, Part 5
Java security evolution
and concepts, Part 5 |
J2EE or J2SE?
JNDI works with both
J2EE or J2SE?
JNDI works with both |
J2SE 1.4.1
boosts garbage
collection
J2SE 1.4.1
boosts garbage
collection |
Back to your Class
roots
Back to your Class
roots |
Java Testing and Design
Java Testing and Java Test and Design is the companion to any book on Java software development practices, techniques, and testing. Software developers, QA analysts and IT managers working in large corporate IT groups, software development companies, and |
An Intelligent Nim Computer Game, Part 1
An Intelligent Nim Computer Game, Part 1
In this article, you learn how to play Nim, and discover tools for creating an intelligent computer player. In the next article, you apply those tools to the creation of that player, while building console and G |
Taming Tiger, Part 3
J2SE 5—code named "Tiger"—is the most significant revision to the Java language since its original inception. Tarak Modi's primary goal with his three-part series on Tiger is to familiarize readers with J2SE 5's most important additions and show how t |
Light-Weight Visual Components Library for different platform: SWT, J2SE, J2ME, .NET
Light-Weight Visual Components Library for different platform: SWT, J2SE, J2ME, .NET |
JDBC RowSet Implementations Tutorial (PDF)
This tutorial explains how to use the standard JDBC RowSet implementations that are provided as part of J2SE 5.0. Get up to speed with each RowSet definition and benefit from improved scalability and robustness. |
Using JConsole to Monitor Applications
JConsole is the Java Monitoring and Management Console, a new graphical tool shipped in J2SE JDK 5.0. This article describes how JConsole can be used to observe information about an application running on the Java platform, with an overview of the J2SE 5. |
Tiger and Beyond, the Future of the Java Platform
Part Two of an interview with Sun Microsystems' Sun Fellow, Graham Hamilton, explores Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition 5.0 (J2SE 5.0) and the future of the Java language. |
J2ME Technology Turns 5!
In 2004 the Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition (J2ME) celebrated its fifth anniversary. This article presents where J2ME is today. |
Five Reasons to Move to the J2SE 5 Platform
Five important reasons to move to the Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition (J2SE platform) 5.0, supported by data and references to prove that the 5.0 release will reduce development and runtime costs. |
NetBeans IDE 4.1
Out-of-the-box support for J2EE 1.4 and Web Services. Check out what early access release 2 can do for you! |
|
|
|