The final results of the Public Review Ballot for JSR 372 are in, and the latest JavaServer Faces specification (JSF 2.3) has been approved. The public review started near the end of January, and ...
Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with content, and download exclusive resources. Senyo Simpson discusses how Rust's core ...
What is the JavaServer Faces specification all about? Why is it important to Web development? Among other things, JavaServer Faces technology is a framework that simplifies user interface (UI) ...
No matter what type of Java development you do, from server side or client side programming to consumer or enterprise apps, mobile is probably changing the way you do your job. There's just no getting ...
Due in the third quarter of 2016, JSF 2.3 is being positioned as the default MVC framework for Java EE. Four categories of improvement are listed in the JSR: Small scale new features Community driven ...
The Java Community Process is refreshingly low-key compared to much of the software industry, so it was probably not surprising that there was very little hoopla this past week when JavaServer Faces ...
Hundreds of thousands of Grok chatbot chats, including sensitive data, were exposed on Google after xAI’s share feature leaked them. AI is rapidly moving beyond creating static videos to generating ...
Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with content, and download exclusive resources. Ramya Krishnamoorthy shares a detailed case ...
Community driven content discussing all aspects of software development from DevOps to design patterns. Watching both the tech industry as well as mainstream media oversimplify the February 2017 ...
During the past year Java vendors have heard an increasingly insistent drumbeat from developers: Simplify enterprise Java. J2EE, the rich but extraordinarily complex set of Java server technologies, ...