Java EE Application Server SpringSource
With the huge growth in the internet use these days, the concept of cloud computing and web based application has become so familiar to most ordinary consumers and businesses. And java, as an object oriented programming language comes to provide a powerful programming language for the internet that is capable of providing all the solutions we need.
Java language and java technologies provide a computing environment where application logic is enable to be executed in and outside the web browsers that communicates with other processes running elsewhere on the network. In this way, developers can easily distribute powerful executable programs and sophisticated computing over the web. In addition, with support of Java enterprise (Java EE) server or apache tomcat server (an implementation of the Java Servlet and JavaServer Pages technologies) with EJB container added, your java-based web applications will run in more stable and lightweight.
However the problem comes when java developers find difficulties in overcoming the complexity of enterprise Java. Of course, with a simpler java architecture, will make it easier for developers to build, run, and manage enterprise java, grails, and groovy applications with a better testability, a fewer bug, and ultimately produce a more robust end product.
But today, you can rely on Source Spring to solve this enterprise java complexity. Source Spring provides a complete java infrastructure solution, from high productivity java developer tools, custom frameworks, to lightweight java application server runtimes. Their complete suite of products, including Spring Source Enterprises to save development time of Spring-powered enterprise applications, Spring tomcat application server with the Spring container added to replace the EJB container and give enterprise capabilities and support, Spring Source modular OSGi-based Java server, and many products for Apache Web and Tomcat Application Server management, etc.
This entry was posted on Monday, August 3rd, 2009 at 5:45 pm and is filed under internet & network, technology. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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