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DDC-I partners with aicas

Kirsten Doyle
By Kirsten Doyle, ITWeb contributor.
Johannesburg, 11 Jun 2007

Real-time, safety-critical Java solutions

DDC-I has partnered with aicas to develop what it calls the industry`s most advanced real-time, safety-critical Java solutions, reports Epicos.com.

DDC-I will combine key elements of aicas` patented JamaicaVM embedded Java technology with DDC-I`s own Score technology, to create the industry`s first Eclipse-based mixed-language development and run-time environment that integrates real-time Java with C, Embedded C++, and Ada.

The new environment will support the existing real-time specification for Java. It will also support the emerging safety-critical Java specification under development by the Safety-Critical Java Expert Group.

Sun previews Open ESB

Sun Microsystems discussed the most recent milestones in Project Open ESB, a next generation integration platform, offering increased interoperability, designed to assist developers attain the benefits of a service-oriented architecture, without relying on closed, proprietary technologies, says Websitehostdirectory.

The Project Open Enterprise Service Bus (Open ESB) community`s next release of Open ESB, will include a standards-based next generation integration platform. Open ESB is an industry- leading open source ESB implementation developed under open community process.

The latest release, Open ESB 2.0 Preview, allows developers to integrate Web services and enterprise applications as loosely coupled composite applications, thereby making large-scale implementation of service-oriented architecture principles manageable in a heterogeneous world.

SYS-CON.TV minimises Java surprises

SYS-CON TV has presented a live Web cast on "How to minimise unpleasant surprises in your Java code base" from its New York Times Square studios in New York City, reports Coldfusion.

The 60-minute live presentation focuses on the management of code quality, which has always been a grey area in software development. The main goal of a Java development manager has been to develop a working application and deploy it in a production environment, and on time.

After deployment, bugs inevitably begin to pop up here and there, users of the application are unhappy, and the project`s success ends up depending on the skills and goodwill of Java programmers to iron out the bugs.

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