Developer Week ’24
Developer Week (DWX) is a software developer conference in Europe, that showcases innovative technologies and creative solutions including .NET, Web, Cloud, Java and more.
Developer Week (DWX) is a software developer conference in Europe, that showcases innovative technologies and creative solutions including .NET, Web, Cloud, Java and more.
Our OmniFish team has published a series of articles to guide through upgrading Java EE and Jakarta EE 8 applications to Jakarta EE 10. In the guide, we explain everything you need to know to upgrade to Jakarta EE 10 successfully and almost in no time.
Upgrading from Jakarta EE 10 from an older version of Jakarta EE or Java EE can be a bit tricky and may require some extra attention to detail. But don’t worry, we’ve got you covered! In this series of posts, we’ll explain everything you need to know before upgrading to Jakarta EE 10 and guide you complete the upgrade successfully and in almost no time.
The challenges with upgrading to Jakarta EE 10 or to Eclipse GlassFish 7 fall into these 3 main categories:
Now in its sixth year, this is the Enterprise Java ecosystem’s leading survey with thousands of developers sharing their insights from around the globe. The purpose of the survey is to gain a better understanding of the requirements, priorities, and perceptions of Java developer communities.
OmniFish are proud to announce they’ve established themselves as a new international company in the field of Jakarta EE support, specifically supporting the application server Eclipse GlassFish, a new cloud‑native Jakarta EE runtime Piranha Cloud, and their associated components such as Mojarra, the Jakarta Faces implementation.
The release of Jakarta EE 10 marks a new era in Java, with an exciting mix of evolving and new specifications that will enable IBM to deliver an even stronger application platform for cloud-native innovation. Join our panel of experts from Jakarta EE and IBM as they explore the impact of Jakarta EE 10 on the enterprise Java market.
Jakarta EE 9.1 support is now available as part of Open Liberty 21.0.0.12, alongside configurable response headers, which offer more granular control over response headers! Several significant bug fixes are also part of this release.
Join Jared Anderson (Senior Software Engineer - WebSphere Performance Engineering) as he explores Jakarta EE 9 and its support in Open Liberty, the first vendor-compatible implementation for this new release of the spec.
Contact us to have us present at your next Java User Group event.