Home page > Software Forums  

Information Regarding Internet Development In Software Forums on Software Development Register

News And Tips, Drivers, Desktop Wallpapers, Links To Updates, Software Utilities. Since The Mid-1990s, Web Development Has Been One Of The Fastest Growing Industries In The World
For you information - If you own a website that related to internet development you are welcome to participate in our website. Contact us to be participate in the project and join our partner list: Software Development Wiki, Software Development Online Portal, Software Development Central, etc.
internet development
Website about Internet Development - online portal of Internet Technology Architecture and Development. Other useful information: What do computer programmers think about Microsoft's role in the development of the Internet, and the social implications of the underlying technical issues? We asked Harry Hochheiser, an Internet software developer and board member of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility for his perspective. J2EE: EJB, JSP, Servlets, JSF, JSTL, JCA, JMS, JTA, JNDI, JDBC, JMX, RMI, etc. Frameworks: Struts, Hibernate, JPA, iBATIS, JBoss AOP, Spring, JSF, AJAX, GWT, YUI, Flex/Flash, JUnit, and Jakarta common libraries. Integration: Web Services on Axis and WebMethods; as well as the Web Service Standards such as SOAP, WSDL and UDDI.
CorpWatch : Microsoft And Internet Development - What do computer programmers think about Microsoft's role in the development of the Internet, and the social implications of the underlying technical issues? We asked Harry Hochheiser , an Internet software developer and board member of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility for his perspective. At the core of Hochheiser's concern is the corporatization of Internet development, of which Microsoft is a powerful participant: the shift from open, collaborative software development "to build a system that works" to closed industry consortia whose corporate members are designing the global information infrastructure to serve their own competitive advantage rather than public good. CorpWatch : Microsoft and Internet Development Contact l Sitemap Home » Industries » Technology & Telecommunications E-Mail Page Printer Safe Microsoft and Internet Development Interview with Harry Hochheiser, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility CorpWatch May 6th, 1998 Founded in the early 1980s to respond the threat of nuclear war, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) is a US-based nonprofit organization addressing the impact of computer technology on society. The organization is currently involved in initiatives to ensure open Internet governance and use. This interview was conducted in January 1998, shortly after Microsoft reached an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice to remove its Internet Explorer icon from the Windows desktop. CW: How does the US Department of Justice's case against Microsoft impact computer users? HH: The issue for individual computer users is, what do you see when you turn on the computer? Right now, if you go out and buy an Intel class or compatible computer it's almost impossible to find without having Windows 95 preinstalled. And with Windows 95, it will come with some large set of software. And with all this software, usually there's some form of a Net browser. That's the way it's been -- you turn on the computer, and there's the Internet Explorer icon from Microsoft, and you've got Microsoft's Web browser. A sort of a small milestone in the suit with the Justice Department, was that Microsoft agreed that that particular icon would not come up when you turn on the computer. Most of the software will still be there, but the icon won't be. Now what does that mean? It means that it's going to be a little bit harder [to use] the Explorer. It also means that the functionality of Internet Explorer that Microsoft has been trying to push in their next big advance will not be available. That functionality is Active Desktop, which tightly integrates the functioning of your computer and your desktop -- your screen and your file system -- with World Wide Web. What they're trying to do is eliminate the distinction between what's on your hard disk and what's on the Web; you access it in an integrated manner. Active Desktop will be something you'll now have to install manually.
 
 
Copyright © 2008-2009. software.art-register.net. All rights reserved.