JDJ Product Review
— Parasoft Jtest
8.0 By Jason Bell  In terms of unit testing
and code compliance,
Jtest is a real
heavyweight in the arena.
For those who haven't
come across Jtest before,
it's an application that
will analyze your Java
application code for you.
At present Jtest has 700
built-in rules and 100
securi... Nov. 17, 2006 10:45 AM Reads: 14,950 Replies: 1 |
The Jury's Still Out On
Ruby On Rails (RoR) and
AJAX By Jason Bell  In most cases I'm a
patient and tolerant
person. Once you get to
know me, I'm easy to get
along with, occasionally
complex, but not very
often. My patience and
tolerance has pretty much
gone out the window in
the last week or so. It
all stems from two
technologies... Sep. 19, 2006 04:45 PM Reads: 39,329 Replies: 10 |
Do I Really Need That?
Benefits of SOA, RSS,
J2EE, or SOAP By Jason Bell  In February I took on the
daunting task of starting
a new venture. It was
based on an idea I had
while reading a book on
the low cost airline,
Ryanair. I never knew you
could lease an aircraft;
I thought an airline with
billowing amounts of cash
just bought the mach... Nov. 30, 2005 07:45 PM Reads: 22,338 Replies: 7 |
Job Discernment By Jason Bell Those of you kind enough
to read my editorials for
JDJ would have noticed
that I started a new job.
A fresh start, a new
year, a colossal waste of
my time it turned out.
Startup companies can be
odd to work for sometimes
and you have to read
between the lines when i... Jun. 3, 2004 12:00 AM Reads: 24,061 Replies: 2 |
Man with an Open Heart By Jason Bell I'm a firm believer in
seasons of work for a
specific job. The season
of writing for me is
coming to a nice close -
this is my last editorial
for JDJ (though I still
have reviews that I have
to get on with). It's
been fun watching the
Java world open up before
me ... Feb. 5, 2004 12:00 AM Reads: 13,050 |
Exposing the Services By Jason Bell Depending on who you talk
to, the response you get
when you mention the
words 'Web' and
'services' in the same
sentence can vary from a
big smile to an amazingly
serious frown. It's easy
to develop an application
or Web site that uses the
Amazon API and the Google
API to great effect. Jan. 8, 2004 12:00 AM Reads: 15,041 |
A Christmas Wish List By Jason Bell I may not believe in the
existence of someone who
can span the globe in a
number of hours, along
with a collection of
antler-based creatures
(one with a red nose, the
others not). However, it
doesn't stop me from
making a list of stuff
that I want for
Christmas. A... Dec. 4, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 18,684 |
Lift Your Vision Higher! By Jason Bell Having ridden the storm
of the dot-com decline,
it's nice to see the
worldwide press having a
semi-upbeat tone about
the tech economy. Java,
as a language, rode the
crest of the wave; it
could do no wrong and
Java developers were the
geeks among geeks. Nov. 3, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 18,387 Replies: 2 |
An Interview with Bruce
Eckel By Jason Bell Recently, Jason Bell had
the opportunity to talk
with Bruce Eckel, noted
author of Thinking in
Java and Thinking in C++. Nov. 3, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 19,939 Replies: 2 |
I Love Logging! By Jason Bell A few months ago I wrote
an editorial on the
touchy subject of proper
testing (Vol. 8, issue
6). Thanks to you there
was much support (and a
volume of information
from Parasoft and how
JTest linked with unit
testing; this opened my
eyes!). Oct. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 14,456 |
A Modern-Day Cinderella By Jason Bell I can contain my
annoyance no longer. I've
watched comments, blogs,
and industrial news come
and go; I've had
sleepless nights and
gone off my food. My
argument? The name 'Java
2 Standard Edition'
should be changed to
'Core Java,' from a
marketing point of vie... Sep. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 15,495 Replies: 1 |
JavaOne By Jason Bell The JavaOne conference
passed me by this year,
as did the previous
seven. I never get the
time to attend these
things since I'm in the
UK and it's a long
journey. So I sat back in
my big developer's chair
and watched the Java
world pass by like
Weblogs in the night. Aug. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 14,292 |
Sleeping Tigers By Jason Bell J2SE is going through a
bit of an overhaul at the
moment, with the release
of J2SDK 1.5 (project
name 'Tiger') due at the
end of 2003. Sun
Microsystems ran a
feature article in May
about this release that
included a Q&A with
Joshua Bloch, a senior
staff engineer at Sun. Jul. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 17,072 Replies: 3 |
Testing, Testing . . . By Jason Bell While I was preparing for
my interview with Bruce
Eckel, a quote appeared
in his Web log in May
that said 'If it's not
tested, it's broken.' It
got me thinking about how
much I actually tested
the code that I wrote.
Now I don't write JUnit
tests for everything, but ... Jun. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 15,378 Replies: 6 |
Building the Social
Network By Jason Bell Whether you like it or
not, you're part of the
Java community. Just by
reading this publication
you're declaring that
you're a part of the Java
way of life, maybe not by
choice but you're still
here. We have a network
of developers all
programming in the same
lang... May. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 17,633 Replies: 1 |
Train-ing By Jason Bell Training - it can be a
dirty word to some;
learning by doing is all
very well but what do you
actually learn? On my
daily commute to work, I
have 90 minutes on the
train to read, digest,
and think about how to
implement these new
practices into my
programming. Apr. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 15,055 |
Can the API Docs Be
Improved? By Jason Bell The Java Dudes cartoon on
the back page of JDJ has
boosted my reputation as
someone who likes the API
documentation for the
core Java language. It's
easy to navigate, it's
quick, and it answers
some of those common
Java-related questions.
There are a couple of
que... Mar. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 14,221 Replies: 3 |
Who Needs Resolutions By Jason Bell Since last month's JDJ
was the Linux focus
issue, I didn't get a
chance to inflict my
goals for the year. I
call them goals, as I
hate the term New Year's
resolutions as
resolutions are always
broken by the end of the
first week of the new
year. In fact, I think
... Feb. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 14,127 |
Dipping Your Toe in the
Water By Jason Bell There's a saying - 'Life
is about choices' - that
can also be applied to
Linux. In the mainstream
there are about 60
different vendors with a
Linux distribution
working on a number of
hardware platforms. For
the enthusiasts that's
okay, as they can
reinstall as of... Jan. 1, 2003 12:00 AM Reads: 15,584 |
Supporting Other
Industries By Jason Bell Summer 1999: I was
fortunate enough to be
working on a Java project
to write an Internet
airline ticket
reservation system for a
client. It was one of my
first Java programs and
many a sleepless night
was had. It opened my
eyes to the travel
industry and how the
... Dec. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 14,931 |
Rational XDE by Rational
Software Corporation By Jason Bell Over the past few years
the integrated
development environment
has raged on. For years
I've used a text editor
and a build tool to
create my Java software;
I used no set processes
or design methods. The
integration of UML
modeling and Java coding
makes obvious sen... Dec. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 24,983 Replies: 12 |
What Happened to the
Evangelists? By Jason Bell In my last few editorials
I've been looking back in
order to look forward;
for example, how to
encourage and empower new
programmers, how to
learn, and how to create
better requirements and
user expectations. Now I
feel it's time to look
forward. Nov. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 15,670 Replies: 3 |
Success Without a
Successor Is Failure! By Jason Bell I've always believed that
we should pass on our
knowledge to our peers,
then, over time, we'd
have a network of
programmers who had a
firm foundation in how
Java works. To that end I
try and help out where I
can. Oct. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 13,970 Replies: 2 |
The 84% Rule By Jason Bell According the Standish
Group, 84% of all
IT-related projects are
not delivered on time or
within budget. Now when
the world reads
'IT-related projects,'
the automatic assumption
is that the IT department
is to blame. Sep. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 15,999 Replies: 4 |
Desert Island Open-Source
Disks By Jason Bell You may be aware of a
radio program in the UK
called 'Desert Island
Discs.' Basically,
well-known people choose
which records they would
want if they were stuck
on a desert island (I've
yet to hear anyone say
they're taking a CD
player). Something of a
similar nat... Aug. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 16,186 |
Learning from History By Jason Bell There's no escaping that
the evolution of
programming languages has
its advantages and
disadvantages. The
addition of the
java.util.regex package
to the JDK1.4 API is a
perfect example of Java's
development since 1995.
However, there's a group
of programmers who k... Jul. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 13,139 |
Java-Miner by CAST By Jason Bell It's unfortunate that
programmers come and go
at an alarming rate in
the IT industry, leaving
code that must be
maintained by someone who
quite frequently had no
hand in writing it.
Software engineers using
UML have models on how
their programs behave,
but the res... May. 1, 2002 12:00 AM Reads: 13,722 |
Mycgiserver By Jason Bell Sometimes finding hosting
for your well-crafted
pieces of code can be
more work than the coding
itself. Locating a
service that does it free
of charge is a real
challenge; however,
www.mycgiserver.com is a
service that meets both
criteria. The site
started life as... Sep. 1, 2001 12:00 AM Reads: 13,762 |