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Posts Tagged ‘JBoss’

Great Indian Developer Summit 2012 – Bangalore, India

April 6, 2012 Leave a comment

Getting Ready for GIDS 2012: http://bit.ly/bNdiwX
I will be presenting 2 sessions (Java Track keynote and Practical AS7 ). Other Red Hat Speakers will be there with great sessions: Manik Surtani, Peter Muir and Andrew Lee Rubinger.

We look forward to attending this amazing conference!

Categories: JBoss AS7, Open Source Tags: , , , ,

JBoss ESB 4.8 Released !

April 14, 2010 Leave a comment
The JBoss ESB team just release version 4.8.  This is now available for download from our project site.
The notable improvements during this process were:
- Performance
- updating to the jUDDI v3.0.1 codebase
- better jUDDI integration through our InVM and RMI transports
- addition of webservice endpoints for jUDDI
- Updating to picketlink 1.0.1
- improved job scheduling through our jBPM scheduler
- Many SOAP proxy improvements
- Many JON management improvements
and not to mention numerous bug fixes.
Check the release notes here.
Congratulations to Kevin Conner and the JBoss ESB Team!

The GateIn team released 3.0.0-Beta03!

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

Since the announcement of the GateIn project at JBoss World 2009 in Chicago, the folks from Exo and JBoss Portal have been working actively at building the next foundation of the JBoss Portal Platform.

Come and get it!
It’s deployed in Maven:
Here: http://repository.jboss.com/maven2/org/exoplatform/portal/
and here: http://repository.jboss.com/maven2/org/gatein/

And the packages are available at:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/jboss/files/GateIn/Portal/3.0.0-Beta03

JBOSS == JOBSS. Open Source middleware certification

November 15, 2009 Leave a comment

Red Hat APAC just launched a new offer for JBoss Administrators who take the JB336 course this month.

Free JBCAA certification exam if you enroll in the JBoss Administration course in November

This training and certification combination packs quite a punch. JBoss training builds on your existing administration experience so that you can get the most out of your application stack. Having JBCAA certification will give you ability to install, configure, monitor, ..

Now, don’t wait, go online to benefit from this promotion!

 

Already 2 Quarters in APAC/Japan

August 27, 2009 Leave a comment

This week JBoss will close its 2nd FY10 Quarter here in Asia Pacific / Japan. The Opensource wave is growing stronger daya by day in this region and no wonder why I haven’t been blogging :-) . I have been busy meeting with the community, our partners, customers accross India, Japan, Australia, China, Korea and Singapore.

Well, I can’t resist any longer, there are too many cool stuff happening at JBoss to keep it quiet. I will be flying to JBoss World, Chicago next week and will blog about what’s new and exciting.

If you missed us or couldn’t attend our booth at Java One, you can visit the booth presentation here.

Before I go, I’d like to mention some important new projects:

  • Gert Franz and the Railo Team releaseed the Open Source version of Railo, the fastest CFML OSS engine
  • Tim Fox and the messaging team’s new project HornetQ a multi-protocol, embeddable, very high performance, clustered, asynchronous messaging system.
  • Trustin Lee and the remoting team released JBoss Netty 3.1.0 which is used by HornetQ  for the low level socket IO.
  • Manik Surtani released Infinispan is a highly scalable platform for distributed data grids in Java.

See you next week.

APAC Trip, JBoss AS5, Red Hat and Google on Next Generation Web Application Development

December 14, 2008 Leave a comment

it’s been a week that I came back from a long trip around Asia with Peter Muir. Now that the backlog of emails and urgent tasks is reduced to a decent size, it is time to write about some of the most interesting events that happened in the last few weeks.
The one that keeps coming to mind is: JBoss AS 5 is now GA !
Well, you must think, that’s been a week now, wake up Bruno. Anyway, I just want to say thanks to the JBoss team and the numerous contributors who made this possible. I am sure you read Sacha’s blog, but if you haven’t then you should: http://sacha.labourey.com/2008/12/05/as-500-we-are-done-next/
I also like reading Rich Sharples Blog: http://blog.softwhere.org/. I read both Rich and Sacha’s not only because I’ll be able to find anything that’s happening at JBoss, but more importantly they inspire me with their vision and insight in the software engineering world.

So now I am also done with AS5 and getting some browny points from Sacha and Rich, let’s get onto other interesting move in the RIA space, read here:
http://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Stock%20News/2078429/

Google Web Toolkit and Red Hat’s JBoss Enterprise Middleware Enable Next Generation Web Application Development

The announcement that Red Hat has signed the Google Contributor Agreement confirmed our commitment to provide the most flexible, open and productive development framework.
When traveling with Pete, I learned a lot about Seam and Web Beans and I was really impressed by Seam’s flexible architecture and the Team’s commitment to give developers the ability to select between different technology. For example you can choose Flex which is fully integrated with Seam. [http://www.seamframework.org/Community/FlexAndSeamIntegration].

Another great addition to our new Microcontainer is the ability to provide enteprise capabilities to apps build with Ruby on Rails or even CFML.

Check out Bob’s blog: http://oddthesis.org/theses/enterprise-on-rails

And Gert Franz’s CFML Engine: Railo [http://www.railo-technologies.com/en/index.cfm?treeID=357] which is soon going to enjoy the same level of  integration.

While my Korean, Chineese and Japaneese are close to non-existant, I would like to give you some feedback on the Opensource eco-system on that side of the world.

We’ll start with Korea since this is where we first landed after our Australian visit. Pete and I where presenting at the opensource symposium and we had the opportunity to meet with some of the JCO [http://www.javacommunity.org/] community members, including Hyung-Bai Kim, Vice President. After the event which counted a large crowd (over 600 participant) we sat together for hours, sharing our  opensource vision and epxerience. It was a great meeting followed by a traditional Korean dinner. I was impressed by the breadth and depth of their technical expertise. I can’t wait to meet with them again, it is such a great opportunity to build a relationship with the Korean community.

JCO has an impressive community, over 100,000 java developers. Local JBoss team contributed to create a localized  web site: http://www.jbossian.com/.

Korean’s trip was a very nice experience.

Japan was next. First, it felt like Blade Runner, as we arrived late at night, jet lagged to the max and really tired from the Korean treatment :-) . We got ready for the next couple of days of meetings with fellow open-sourcers and some analysts. The event “JBoss Compass Tokyo” [http://www.jp.redhat.com/event/200811jboss_compass.html] was packed with a very techie audience. Questions not only targeted JBoss and Java technology, instead there was a strong focus on our opensource strategy and roadmap. It was very important for the Japanese public to understand that JBoss is and will remain open source.

China should have been next, however due to issues getting a Visa on time, the trip is postponed.

Stay tuned.

Categories: JBoss R&D, Open Source Tags: , , , ,
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