Mid West Java Tech Days 2007 - Chicago Trip Report
Mid West Java Tech Days
concluded in Chicago yesterday.
With approximately 160 participants, the conference attendees were slightly
larger in number than the
Minneapolis Tech Days.
The interaction with the audience was also good. The day started with Tim
Bray's key note and it was a
repeat of Minneapolis.
I delivered two talks (same as in Minneapolis)- "Metro: Web services
interoperability with Microsoft .NET" and "jMaki: Framework for
Ajax-enabled Web 2.0 apps". Here are the questions (with answers) that were
asked during the presentation:
Metro: Web services
interoperability with Microsoft .NET
- Are slides available ?
Yes, very well. They are available
here. A link to the demos shown in the talk is available at:
- Can Metro apps be deployed on JBoss ?
JBoss WS 2.1.0 will support Metro. Read more details
here.
- .NET 2.0 ?
Metro provides interoperability with .NET 3.0. We have not tested
explicitly with .NET 2.0 however it would be nice if you can test and
let us know.
- Can the WAR created by NetBeans be deployed on other containers ?
Yes, NetBeans IDE allows to configure Tomcat as a container. After
Tomcat is Metro-enabled, using the script bundled with the standalone
build of Metro (downloadable from
http://metro.dev.java.net), a Metro WAR can be easily deployed on
Tomcat directly from within the NetBeans IDE. All the Metro features,
except Transactional Web services will work on Tomcat.
jMaki: Framework for Ajax-enabled
Web 2.0 apps
- Are slides available ?
Yes, very well. They are available
here. A link to the demos shown in the talk is available at:
- Can jMaki be integrated with other MVC controllers such as Spring
?
Currently jMaki integrates very well with
Rails. Support for other MVC
frameworks can be added by community participation.
Let us know
if you are interested.
- Are jMaki widgets available as part of standard plugin ?
Yes, jMaki plugin for
NetBeans and
Eclipse comes
with all the palettes and widgets that are available.
- Can the jMaki WAR be deployed on any container ?
The only requirement for jMaki for Java is Servlet 2.4 and JSP 1.2. If
you are using JSF then JSF 1.1 support is required as well.
- Can a jMaki WAR be hosted on a public site ?
Yes, The ISP need to have WAR hosting capabilities. If the WAR needs to
access external services, then the ISP may also need to allow that
explicitly.
- Can I use it in production ?
jMaki is ready for production. jmaki.com is using jMaki on PHP.
Let us know
if we can help you in any manner.
Here is the picture album:
And I met one my avid blog readers - Roman Kuzmik. He was pretty excited
to meet me and it's great to hear you like the content produced on this blog
:)
Next stop
Silicon Valley Code Camp (Nov 27-28).
Technorati: conf
webservices
glassfish
metro
jmaki
netbeans
Posted
by Arun Gupta in webservices |

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