NetBeans 6 delivers great updates to the Matisse GUI builder. Spend a few minutes with Roman Strobl and get an expert briefing on what's new and what has changed. (sponsored)
In this, the third and final installation of Andres' Introduction to Groovy series, you learn about how Groovy handles variable numbers of arguments, named parameters, currying, and more about Groovy operators. Including, some new operators.
Swing Fuse (actually just Fuse), is a framework designed to make it easier to create your own custom desktop components. In this article, Daniel Spiewak shows you how to get started and provides sample source code you can download.
Willam Louth shows how he uses JXInsight Probes to investigate probable performance issues with code bases that he is not familiar with. He also highlights possible pitfalls in creating a benchmark, as well as in the analysis of results.
The Lobo Project is pleased to announce the first release of our new web browser: Lobo. Lobo is open source and is written entirely in Java. It is being developed with the aim to support HTML 4, Javascript and CSS2. The general goal of the project is to produce a browser that is fast, easy to extend, secure and feature-rich.
Lobo 0.97 is being released along with a browser API that complements our rendering engine.
Additionally, we are releasing a plugin API that can be used to write Lobo extensions in Java.
Version 0.97 of Lobo includes features such as HTTP & proxy authentication, a download dialog, navigation menues, browser preferences, HTTPS support and multipart POST encoding. It also introduces some features not usually found in other browsers, such as a new bookmarks system based on tags & search, a directory separate from bookmarks, a list of recent hosts, configurable search engines, and page services such as Wayback Machine.
We are also releasing Cobra 0.97, a new version of the HTML rendering engine Lobo relies on. It includes about 40 fixes and enhancements relative to version 0.96.5R2. Please see the changelog for details.
Lobo replaces the browser we have been releasing up to this point, Warrior. The Lobo Project is the new name for the project previously referred to as The XAMJ Project. The domain lobobrowser.org replaces xamjwg.org. This change is refected in our APIs.
Note that while Warrior was released under the LGPL license, Lobo is released under the GPL (v2) license.
Lobo Browser 0.97
URL: Java browser
At 8:29 PM on Jul 8, 2007, The Lobo Project wrote:
Fresh Jobs for Developers Post a job opportunity
Lobo 0.97 is being released along with a browser API that complements our rendering engine.
Additionally, we are releasing a plugin API that can be used to write Lobo extensions in Java.
Version 0.97 of Lobo includes features such as HTTP & proxy authentication, a download dialog, navigation menues, browser preferences, HTTPS support and multipart POST encoding. It also introduces some features not usually found in other browsers, such as a new bookmarks system based on tags & search, a directory separate from bookmarks, a list of recent hosts, configurable search engines, and page services such as Wayback Machine.
We are also releasing Cobra 0.97, a new version of the HTML rendering engine Lobo relies on. It includes about 40 fixes and enhancements relative to version 0.96.5R2. Please see the changelog for details.
Lobo replaces the browser we have been releasing up to this point, Warrior. The Lobo Project is the new name for the project previously referred to as The XAMJ Project. The domain lobobrowser.org replaces xamjwg.org. This change is refected in our APIs.
Note that while Warrior was released under the LGPL license, Lobo is released under the GPL (v2) license.
0 replies so far (
Post your own)