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Historically, JAOO was a Java conference, but times are changing and so are we. This year we look at .NET both in relation to J2EE and in itself. In this track we have included presentations focusing on J2EE, .NET and techie stuff. Some presentations, like Andy Longshaw in the Web services track, overlap with these fields.
Doug Lea, author of "Concurrent Programming in Java", will start the track with a focus on JSR166, which will add a set of concurrency features to the next release of Java.
This thread also includes Joshua Block & Neal Gafter describing forthcoming Java programming language features. And that these guys know Java is evident in their last presentation: "More Programming Puzzlers", where they will confuse even hard-core Java programmers.
(Monday 10:45 - 11:30, Tutorial Room)
(Monday 15:15 - 16:00, Tutorial Room)
(Wednesday 10:00 - 10:55, Conference Hall)
In his first talk on this track, Ingo Rammer will describe Custom Attributes, Interfaces, Reflection, CodeDom, and other features which are provided in the .NET Framework to support extensible applications. And in the next presentation, he will explain why you owe yourself a look at EnterpriseServices in .NET.
(Monday 13:00 - 13:45, Conference Hall)
(Monday 16:15 - 17:00, Conference Hall)
Andy Olsen will give an introduction to NET development. The presentation will include a lot of examples and you will be able to bring code samples with you home after the talk.
(Tuesday 15:15 -16:00, Protected Room)
Integration between J2EE and .NET is important and therefore Hermod Opstvedt presents: "Integrating J2EE and Your Office Automation Tools Using J2EE CAS" or how to create an Excel sheet with a graph, or Word document, fueled by an EJB or Servlet.
In this integration thread we also find a talk on Java/.NET interoperability by Alexander Krapf which will include a comparison of the object models, problematic issues with .NET's CLS specification, and a detailed analysis of the possible integration approaches.
(Tuesday 10:45 -11:30, Protected Room)
(Wednesday 10:00 - 11:45, Protected Room)
Alan Knight and Naci Dai will explain how web technologies relate to objects. They describe different possibilities and their experiences with it.
(Tuesday 13:00 -13:45, Public Room)
And concerning the techie stuff; Michael schwartzbach introduces Xact, a high-level approach for Java using XML templates as a first-class data type with operations for manipulating XML values based on Xpath.
(Tuesday 14:00 -14:45, Protected Room)
Gregor Hohpe: "Test-driven enterprise integration." This talk examines the challenges of testing enterprise integration solutions and proposed a testing approach to tackle the inherent complexities.
(Tuesday 15:15 -16:00, Private Room)
We finish the track with security issues by Arne Koschel in his talk :"Security & Secure interoperability in J2EE Application Servers."
(Wednesday 13:00 - 15:00, Public Room)