| By Todd Williams | Article Rating: |
|
| July 31, 2006 06:30 PM EDT | Reads: |
30,105 |
Another vehicle of Eclipse's future growth will likely come from completely outside the software industry. Consortia from such diverse industries as healthcare, automotive, and finance regularly set software platform and interoperability standards. However, without a portable, cross-platform implementation of the standards, each consortium member must independently construct its own, solely based on the industry specifications. This tremendous duplication of work is both expensive and error-prone. Collaborating on building a common set of specification-compliant infrastructure would universally cut costs while insuring interoperability. But what competitors require before they can cooperate is a level playing field that benefits all of them equally. When they begin to research their options, they will find that Eclipse's maturity, extensibility, and royalty-free redistribution model is very attractive as the base for their collaborative development efforts.
Eclipse is constantly expanding, evolving, and surprising all of us. So much so that it would have been impossible to envision where it has gone in its first few years of existence. And, going forward, doing a reasonable job predicting what is next for Eclipse seems just as difficult. There's only one thing for certain; the future is arriving every day and no one really knows what it holds. Software visionary Alan Kay once said, "The best way to predict the future is to invent it." And, whatever the "next big thing" is, one thing is increasingly likely; it will be built on Eclipse.
About MyEclipse
An innovative, comprehensive, and
affordable Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for Java, J2EE, and
open standards technologies. MyEclipse Enterprise Workbench is a
full-featured enterprise-class platform and tool suite for developing
software applications and systems supporting the full lifecycle of
application development. Facilities and features usually found only in
high-priced enterprise-class products are included in MyEclipse, which
extends the best practices and technology available from the latest
Eclipse 3.1 SDK. Based on open standards and the Eclipse platform,
MyEclipse redefines software pricing, support, and delivery release
cycles by providing a complete application development environment for
J2EE, WEB, AJAX, XML, UML, and databases and the most comprehensive
array of application server connectors (25 target environments) to
optimize development, deployment, testing. and portability.
About Genuitec
Genuitec, LLC is an Eclipse-based
company offering innovative Java and J2EE development tools. It offers
training and expert consulting and development services for the Eclipse
SDK and rich client platforms. A sponsor of Eclipse Plug-in Central,
Genuitec joined the Eclipse Foundation early in 2003 and is currently
on the board of directors, actively participating in the organization's
strategic development and direction. Genuitec was founded in 1997 and
is headquartered in Plano, Texas.
Published July 31, 2006 Reads 30,105
Copyright © 2006 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Todd Williams
Todd Williams is Genuitec's VP of Technology and leads its Eclipse Technology Consulting Practice. He has over twenty years of industry experience in the development of computing infrastructures, large scale distributed software architectures, and the optimization of development processes, techniques, and tools. Todd has been Genuitec's representative to the Eclipse Foundation since 2002 and currently holds an elected seat on the Eclipse Foundation's board of directors.
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JDJ News Desk 07/31/06 06:43:54 PM EDT | |||
By now, you've probably heard about Eclipse as 'the Open Source Java IDE' (). Today, several companies have looked past the Java IDE plug-ins provided as part of Eclipse, and are creating products that use Eclipse as a tool integration platform, both inside and outside of the Java arena. But what about using royalty-free, Open Source Eclipse technology as a general-purpose application framework for your next desktop, fat client, or embedded application? With the support provided by the Eclipse Rich Client Platform (RCP) and the embedded version of the same (eRCP) the idea is certainly not as strange as it first sounds. So we'll explains why Eclipse is a solid desktop, rich-client, or embedded application framework with the potential to greatly simplify and accelerate development as well as forever change the way developers think about writing Java applications. |
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JDJ News Desk 07/31/06 06:18:06 PM EDT | |||
By now, you've probably heard about Eclipse as 'the Open Source Java IDE' (). Today, several companies have looked past the Java IDE plug-ins provided as part of Eclipse, and are creating products that use Eclipse as a tool integration platform, both inside and outside of the Java arena. But what about using royalty-free, Open Source Eclipse technology as a general-purpose application framework for your next desktop, fat client, or embedded application? With the support provided by the Eclipse Rich Client Platform (RCP) and the embedded version of the same (eRCP) the idea is certainly not as strange as it first sounds. So we'll explains why Eclipse is a solid desktop, rich-client, or embedded application framework with the potential to greatly simplify and accelerate development as well as forever change the way developers think about writing Java applications. |
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Eclipse News Desk 07/31/06 05:28:38 PM EDT | |||
By now, you've probably heard about Eclipse as 'the Open Source Java IDE' (). Today, several companies have looked past the Java IDE plug-ins provided as part of Eclipse, and are creating products that use Eclipse as a tool integration platform, both inside and outside of the Java arena. But what about using royalty-free, Open Source Eclipse technology as a general-purpose application framework for your next desktop, fat client, or embedded application? With the support provided by the Eclipse Rich Client Platform (RCP) and the embedded version of the same (eRCP) the idea is certainly not as strange as it first sounds. So we'll explains why Eclipse is a solid desktop, rich-client, or embedded application framework with the potential to greatly simplify and accelerate development as well as forever change the way developers think about writing Java applications. |
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