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    Java Listings
    Total:  153Displaying: 51 - 60Pages: << 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >>

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    Using Java Technology to Build Robots That Can See, Hear Speak, and Move
    Robotics is playing an ever greater role in our world -- from industrial assembly 'droids performing the most mundane of tasks, to search-and-rescue robots saving lives in the depths of collapsed buildings, to interplanetary exploration robots probing the vastness of space. Such robots increasingly take on tasks that are too boring, costly, or dangerous for human beings to perform.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    Bringing SVG Power to Java Applications
    This article will demonstrate how to build SVG libraries and applications on top of the Java platform. I use the example of the ILOG JViews Component Suite (a Java 2D and Swing-based two-dimensional graphics library) for building visually rich user interfaces. You'll see how a Java SVG-enabled library lets you interoperate with many third-party applications -- from SVG authoring tools to SVG user agents.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    SLOOHing the Skies with Java Technologies
    SLOOH provides a live astronomical experience, giving large groups of users direct access to, and control of, high-altitude observatories. You don't get static pictures taken last year. Instead, you see objects like Saturn only when it's actually in the night sky. SLOOH's observatory on the Canary Island of Tenerife is located at IAC's Mount Teide site, which has clear weather, steady dark skies, and an altitude of 7,900 feet. And it's 100% automated and operated from the United States.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    Writing a Web Crawler in the Java Programming Language
    Everyone uses web crawlers—indirectly, at least! Every time you search the Internet using a service such as Alta Vista, Excite, or Lycos, you're making use of an index that's based on the output of a web crawler. Web crawlers—also known as spiders, robots, or wanderers—are software programs that automatically traverse the Web. Search engines use crawlers to find what's on the Web; then they construct an index of the pages that were found.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    Parsers, Part II: Building a Java Class Browser
    If you're a typical programmer--with a background in Computer Science--you look upon parser technology as fondly as your last trip to the dentist. Unless you are YACC freak, you were only too happy to leave behind the semester or two you spent building a simple Pascal or C compiler, along with memories of dorm food and bad roommates.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    Securing Web Services and the Java WSDP 1.5 XWS-Security Framework
    This article presents an overview of information security, followed by an overview of the basic concepts for securing web services. It covers some of the prominent industry standards developed to provide comprehensive security solutions, as well as the Java WSDP 1.5 XWS-Security framework, which implements the OASIS Web Services Security (WSS) specification.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    Secure Internet Programming with Java 2, Standard Edition (J2SE) 1.4
    Any information transmitted over computer networks, or the Internet, is subject to interception. Some of that information could be sensitive, such as credit card numbers and other personal data. To make the Internet more useful in an enterprise setting and for e-commerce, applications must protect their users' information, using encryption, authentication, and secure communications protocols. The secure Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTPS), which is HTTP over the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), is already being used successfully for e-commerce applications.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    Execute Applications Remotely in Java
    The Spawn Server architecture lets you reuse applications and distribute them across a network to enable parallel processing, among other benefits . All I want to do when I get to work is to go home. I'm not saying that I want to blow off work to bask in the sunlight drinking a margarita (okay maybe I do a little). My motto is: Do what you have to do to make your code as solid and flexible as possible. If this can be accomplished, you will be able to go home and stay home without fear of being called in for bugs or having to work the weekend to resolve problems.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    From Tim Stefanini About Threads, Efficiency, and Understanding Java
    One of his first jobs out of school was working at IBM on a project that later became a key radar system for the B-2 bomber. Discouraged with defense work and the IBM VM operating system, he moved to San Francisco and became one of the founding members of Ziff Davis Labs, the world's largest independent computer test center, where he got his first glimpses of the Mosaic browser and what was to become the World Wide Web. He later served in Oracle Corp.'s client-server group, which was then working on rapid development tools and Oracle's first web browser.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    Configure Tomcat for Secure Web Apps
    Use Tomcat's deployment descriptor to secure your Web applications without writing a single line of code . Typically, a Java Web application developer restricts access to part of an application by prompting users to authenticate themselves with a user name and password that will be compared against data in a database or other storage. Although this can be effective, there's an easier method of securing applications one that doesn't require you to write a single line of code.

    Updated: 05/18/2005

    Java Listings
    Total:  153Displaying: 51 - 60Pages: << 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >>



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