JavaBeansTM let you interactively
build graphical user interfaces, and Enterprise JavaBeans let you
write software components that execute business logic that runs on
the server. With Enterprise JavaBeans transaction and state
management, multithreading, and resource pooling are left to the server
implementation.
JavaBeansTM
XML JavaBeans Integration,
Part 3 by Mark Johnson
Take control of the XML written for any JavaBean component,
simplify the Bean file format, and integrate
XMLBeans with the java.beans
package by creating a
new type of property descriptor. (July 1999)
JavaBeans: Unlocking the
BeanContext API by Onno Kluyt
Learn how to let your Beans interrogate their environment for
available capabilities and services, so they can adjust their
behavior to the container or context in which they find themselves.
(May 1999)
Let InfoBus Plug Your Beans
Together by Mark Colan & Christopher J. Karle
Equip your JavaBeansTM
components to exchange data. (March 1998)
Netscape Proposes a New Standard
for Communication Among JavaBeans, Objects by Lisa Stapleton
It would let Java objects in HTML pages communicate directly. (June 1997)
JavaBeans
Update by Greg Voss & Lisa Stapleton
An article about JavaSoft's new component architecture. (Dec 1996)
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Enterprise JavaBeansTM
Enterprise JavaBeans
TM: Working with Entity and Session Beans by Monica Pawlan Release
Enterprise JavaBeans 1.0
How to write thin-client multitiered applications to create your best
business solution and leave the low-level details to the EJB architecture.
(November 1998)
An Introduction to Enterprise
JavaBeansTM Technology by Bill Roth Release Enterprise
JavaBeans 1.0
Presenting a new way to develop, deploy and manage distributed business
applications, including description of the EJB component model and an example
of how the components work. (October 1998)
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