Hi Nigel,
I've spoken to a few people who attended JavaOne. What in your opinion was
the overall feedback?
Personally I'm surprised you stayed with a Netbeans specific example and
did not use Maven for a build tool, would probably have increased usage
after download.
John
On Mon, Oct 8, 2012 at 7:49 PM, Nigel Deakin <nigel.deakin_at_oracle.com>wrote:
> on 01/10/2012 19:23, Nigel Deakin wrote:
>
>> on 28/09/2012 04:40, Nigel Deakin wrote:
>>
>>> It's JavaOne in San Francisco next week, and I'll be talking about JMS
>>> at the following sessions:
>>>
>>> Session ID: CON5884
>>> Session Title: What’s New in Java Message Service 2.0
>>> Venue: Hotel Parc 55 - Cyril Magnin I
>>> Monday 1st October, 11:30 - 12:30
>>> Nigel Deakin - Principal Member of Technical Staff, Oracle
>>>
>>
>> Slides from this session are now available and may be downloaded by
>> following this link:
>> http://java.net/projects/jms-**spec/pages/Home#Latest_news<http://java.net/projects/jms-spec/pages/Home#Latest_news>
>>
>
> At JavaOne we also demonstrated the JMS 2.0 simplified API with GlassFish
> 4. I created a simple Java EE application which showed how to use the
> simplified API to send and receive messages. If you'd like to try it out
> yourself, the source code of the demonstration is in the jms-spec svn
> repository and can also be downloaded directly as a zip.
>
> For links to both the slides and to the demonstration, here is the updated
> link:
> http://java.net/projects/jms-**spec/pages/Home#Slides_and_**
> demonstration_from_JavaOne_**2012<http://java.net/projects/jms-spec/pages/Home#Slides_and_demonstration_from_JavaOne_2012>
>
> There's a readme file which explains how to build and run the
> demonstration.
>
> We're steadily adding additional JMS 2.0 features to GlassFish and to the
> standalone Open Message Queue project . As new features are added I hope to
> create new demonstration projects to show them, but no doubt there will be
> a time lag before I do this.
>
> Nigel
>
>
>
>