Speakers
- Dan Allen
- Aaron Bedra
- Tim Berglund
- Rohit Bhardwaj
- David Bock
- Stevie Borne
- Jeff Brown
- James Carr
- Scott Davis
- Jeremy Deane
- Keith Donald
- Michael Easter
- Robert Fischer
- Neal Ford
- Brian Gilstrap
- Andrew Glover
- Brian Goetz
- Stuart Halloway
- David Hussman
- Mark Johnson
- Dave Klein
- Scott Leberknight
- Tiffany Lentz
- Howard Lewis Ship
- Chris Maki
- Matthew McCullough
- Alex Miller
- Ted Neward
- Michael Nygard
- Pratik Patel
- Mark Richards
- Brian Sam-Bodden
- Srivaths Sankaran
- Nathaniel Schutta
- Aleksandar Seovic
- Ken Sipe
- Brian Sletten
- Matt Stine
- Venkat Subramaniam
- Burr Sutter
- Vladimir Vivien
- Mark Volkmann
- Craig Walls
- Richard Worth
Greg Murray
Ajax Architect @ Sun and Project jMaki Lead
Blog
jMaki and the Open Ajax 1.0 Hub
Posted Monday, October 1, 2007
jMaki works side by side with the Open Ajax 1.0 Hub showing that the two more »jMaki 1.0 is Live
Posted Tuesday, September 25, 2007
After over 2 years of development and a great deal of help from the outside community I am happy to announc more »Presentations
Enterprise Ajax with Java
Ajax and Java are the perfect combination for creating Web 2.0 applications. This session will many of the key issues that Java developers may experience when developing Ajax clients and services. more »Enterprise JavaScript
The popularity of Ajax has given us many JavaScript toolkits over the past few years, each of which have their strengths and weaknesses. This talk will include a discussion of some of the more popular of these, such as Dojo, JQuery, Protoype, Spry, Script more »Project jMaki - Enabling Web 2.0 Application Developers
Creating a breathtaking user interface requires that you and your team are skilled in JavaScript, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), and Ajax interactions. This session will discuss how you can use Project jMaki (or just the ideas behind it) to create JavaScri more »Ajax and Java are the perfect combination for creating Web 2.0 applications. This session will many of the key issues that Java developers may experience when developing Ajax clients and services. Topics that we will cover various topics related to creating services for JavaScript centric clients including security, debugging, and working with JavaScript Object Notation (JSON). This session will conclude with a discussion of both Java-centric and JavaScript-centric approaches (i.e, light client-side logic versus heavy client-side logic) along with the tradeoffs to consider with both of these approaches.
This session will conclude with a discussion of the Java and JavaScript centric along with the tradeoffs and benefits each approach.
The popularity of Ajax has given us many JavaScript toolkits over the past few years, each of which have their strengths and weaknesses. This talk will include a discussion of some of the more popular of these, such as Dojo, JQuery, Protoype, Spry, Script.aculo.us, and the Yahoo User Interface (YUI) library. In addition, the presentation will also discuss what you need to know about JavaScript to develop enterprise-grade applications, including topics such as emulating namespaces in JavaScript, object creation and inheritance using prototypes, associative arrays, closures, internationalization, and Ajax interaction techniques.
This talk will include a discussion of various JavaScript toolkits available today which include Dojo, JQuery, Protoype, Spry, Script.aculo.us, and the Yahoo User Interface (YUI) library.
Creating a breathtaking user interface requires that you and your team are skilled in JavaScript, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), and Ajax interactions. This session will discuss how you can use Project jMaki (or just the ideas behind it) to create JavaScript-centric user interfaces that are developer and designer friendly. Project jMaki is an open-source client/server framework hosted on java.net that is focused on creating JavaScript-centric web applications. jMaki promotes a clean separation of JavaScript, CSS, and template code following the web design approach widely known as ?unobtrusive JavaScript?. This session will include a technical discussion of the architecture and features of jMaki including JavaScript toolkit interoperability, widget design, using layouts, wiring JavaScript functionality together, and service/data integration.
This session will include a technical discussion of the architecture and features including JavaScript toolkit interoperability, widget design, using layouts, wiring JavaScript functionality together, and service/data integration . This session will focus creating JavaScript functionality that is both re-usable and designer friendly.