Saturday and Sunday, October 9th and 10th, 2010
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Sessions
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A Hands on JavaFX Lab - Part A
Wiki Here
Speaker: Stephen ChinStuart Marks   
Level: Intermediate   |   Room: Unknown   |   Agenda Not Made Yet
This presentation is a hands-on introduction to JavaFX given by JavaFX author Stephen Chin and core JavaFX team member Stuart Marks. It will focus primarily on using the JavaFX Script language to drive interactive graphics using the JavaFX scene graph. We'll start with a "Hello, world" program and build it up piece by piece until we have a complete application. At each step of the way, we'll see the code in NetBeans and run it so you can see the results immediately. We'll be covering the following features of the JavaFX platform: language and scene graph basics, sequences, functions, layout, UI controls, classes, calling Java, bind, animation, and effects. Part A of this talk will include an introduction to JavaFX and the first half of the lab. If you bring a laptop (optional), we will have the exercise available for you to walk through together with the presenters lab-style. Note to schedulers: Please schedule sessions A and B back-to-back in the same room if possible.
A Hands on JavaFX Lab - Part B
Wiki Here
Speaker: Stephen ChinStuart Marks   
Level: Intermediate   |   Room: Unknown   |   Agenda Not Made Yet
This presentation is a hands-on introduction to JavaFX given by JavaFX author Stephen Chin and core JavaFX team member Stuart Marks. It will focus primarily on using the JavaFX Script language to drive interactive graphics using the JavaFX scene graph. We'll start with a "Hello, world" program and build it up piece by piece until we have a complete application. At each step of the way, we'll see the code in NetBeans and run it so you can see the results immediately. We'll be covering the following features of the JavaFX platform: language and scene graph basics, sequences, functions, layout, UI controls, classes, calling Java, bind, animation, and effects. Part B of this talk will continue the interactive lab. If you bring a laptop (optional), we will have the exercise available for you to walk through together with the presenters lab-style. Note to schedulers: Please schedule sessions A and B back-to-back in the same room if possible.
Java EE 6 Tooling
Wiki Here
Speaker: Ludovic Champenois   
Level: Intermediate   |   Room: Unknown   |   Agenda Not Made Yet
Overview of the Java EE 6 Platform and its tooling support. Demos of IntelliJ, Eclipse and NetBeans IDEs, all related to Java EE 6 and GlassFish Application Server
Java EE 6: Doing More With Less
Wiki Here
Speaker: Arun Gupta   
Level: Beginner   |   Room: Unknown   |   Agenda Not Made Yet
The Java EE 6 platform is developed as JSR 316 under the Java Community Process and is an extreme makeover from the previous versions.

Several new specifications such as Java Server Faces 2.0, Servlet 3.0, Java Persistence API 2.0, and Context and Dependency Injection 1.0 are included in the platform. This adds more power to the platform and yet make it more flexible so that it can be adopted to different flavors of an application. It breaks the "one size fits all" approach with Profiles and improves on the Java EE 5 developer productivity features. It enables extensibility by embracing open source libraries and frameworks such that they are treated as first class citizens of the platform.

All of this is implemented in GlassFish Open Source Edition that provides a light-weight (OSGi-based), modular, and extensible platform for your Web applications.

This session provides an overview of Java EE 6 and GlassFish. Using multiple simple-to-understand samples it explains the value proposition provided by Java EE 6 and demonstrates how powerful apps can be created by writing lesser code.
OSGi and Java EE in GlassFish
Wiki Here
Speaker: Arun Gupta   
Level: Advanced   |   Room: Unknown   |   Agenda Not Made Yet
OSGi defines a module system and service platform for the Java language. GlassFish is the Java EE 6 Reference Implementation and uses an OSGi kernel to create a light-weight and modular Application Server. There is a lot of activity in the Enterprise Expert Group of OSGi about use of OSGi in enterprise Java environment. GlassFish is a container for standard Java EE applications and also supports what is called a "hybrid application". A hybrid application is a Java EE application as well as an OSGi bundle. It allows application components such as Servlets, EJBs to take full advantage of: * Features such as modularity/dependency management, service dynamism, etc. provided by OSGi service platform. * Services such as transaction management, security, persistence, etc. offered by the Java EE platform. This presentation will provide: * A short introduction to OSGi * Explain how OSGi is used in GlassFish to provide a modular and light-weight App server * Different ways to manage the OSGi runtime in GlassFish * Change the default Felix runtime in GlassFish to Equinox or Knopflerfish * Create a simple OSGi application using CLI and IDEs and deploy in GlassFish * Create several OSGi + Java EE hybrid application and show/discuss the benefits of such an application

75 min sessions
Handouts with lots of Q&A time
Hands-on demos or exercises
Chalk talks or full-on slides
Experts sharing their insights
Share with others, etc.

...and free coffee and food!
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