Java EE/GlassFish Adoption Story by Kerry Wilson/Vanderbilt University

Posted by reza_rahman on Oracle Blogs See other posts from Oracle Blogs or by reza_rahman
Published on Tue, 27 May 2014 21:49:25 +0000 Indexed on 2014/05/28 3:47 UTC
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Kerry Wilson is a Software Engineer at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He served in a consultant role to design a lightweight systems integration solution for the next generation Foundations Recovery Network using GlassFish, Java EE 6, JPA, @Scheduled EJBs, CDI, JAX-RS and JSF. He lives in Nashville, TN where he helps organize the Nashville Java User Group. Kerry shared his Java EE/GlassFish adoption story at the JavaOne 2013 Sunday GlassFish community event - check out the video below:

Here is the slide deck for his talk:

Kerry outlined some of the details of the implementation and emphasized the fact that Java EE can be a great solution for applications that are considered small/lightweight. He mentioned the productivity gains through the modern Java EE programming model centered on annotations, POJOs and zero-configuration - comparing it with competing frameworks that aim towards similar productivity for lightweight applications. Kerry also stressed the quality of the excellent NetBeans integration with GlassFish and the need for community self-support in free, non-commercial open source projects like GlassFish.

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Java EE/GlassFish Adoption Story by Kerry Wilson/Vanderbilt University

Posted by reza_rahman on Oracle Blogs See other posts from Oracle Blogs or by reza_rahman
Published on Tue, 27 May 2014 21:56:08 +0000 Indexed on 2014/05/28 3:47 UTC
Read the original article Hit count: 413

Filed under:

Kerry Wilson is a Software Engineer at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He served in a consultant role to design a lightweight systems integration solution for the next generation Foundations Recovery Network using GlassFish, Java EE 6, JPA, @Scheduled EJBs, CDI, JAX-RS and JSF. He shared his story at the JavaOne 2013 Sunday GlassFish community event - check out the video below:

Kerry outlined some of the details of the implementation and emphasized the fact that Java EE can be a great solution for applications that are considered small/lightweight. He mentioned the productivity gains through the modern Java EE programming model centered on annotations, POJOs and zero-configuration - comparing it with competing frameworks that aim towards similar productivity for lightweight applications. Kerry also stressed the quality of the excellent NetBeans integration with GlassFish and the need for community self-support in free, non-commercial open source projects like GlassFish. You can check out the details of his story on the GlassFish stories blog.

Do you have a Java EE/GlassFish adoption story to share? Let us know and we will highlight it for the community.

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