Java at the heart of Oracle Fusion
Java is at the heart of Oracle`s next-generation Fusion applications, says the company`s senior VP of applications development, John Wookey.
A report by Computerworld says Oracle does new development, it is moving to a J2EE-based platform. According to Wookey, Fusion is the first standards-based, commercially available set of applications all written in Java and XML.
Wookey says Fusion is based on the concept of component-based architecture and the fundamental premise is adaptability so that different components can be connected without interrupting the business flow.
New IDE for Web 2.0
Nexaweb is enhancing business logic integration, data visualisation, and visual editing in its Eclipse-based development environment for enterprise Web 2.0 applications, reports Computerworld.
The report says Nexaweb`s new Studio 2.4 environment plugs into the Eclipse IDE. It is a component of the Nexaweb Enterprise Web 2.0 Suite, which features components for building Java-based systems for SOA.
The suite enables rich Internet application development by supporting both Java and AJAX.
Java pushes e-mail
US-based mobile e-mail provider, Seven, has announced the availability of its push mobile e-mail software on Java-based mobile devices, reports Esato.
The report says the Java devices to support Seven`s application (that delivers mail as soon as it arrives on the e-mail server), are the Sony Ericsson K510 camera phone and the W550 and W810 walkman phones.
Seven says its new products are aimed at ensuring users with mass-market Java-enabled phones can enjoy the same level of user experience previously available only on high-end business devices or so-called smart phones.


