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- The Smart Choice for Smart Clients: J2EE or .NET? by Matthew Murphy - [Clicks: 110]
Don't know where to begin with smart-client implementation or whether J2EE or .NET is the better choice for it? Follow a firm as it uses the .NET and J2EE frameworks to construct a smart-client application requiring online/offline access, no-touch deployment, and data synchronization.
http://www.devx.com/Java/Article/21602 - Jul, 2004 - Better, Faster, Lighter Programming in .NET and Java by Justin Gehtland - [Clicks: 41]
In this article, I'll lay out the five principles from our book, and examine how they apply to programmers working on that other major managed platform, .NET. We'll see a lot of the same problems, but not always the same solutions.
http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2004/07/14/BFLJava.html - Jul, 2004 - Java vs .NET Security: Epilogue by Denis Pilipchuk - [Clicks: 38]
This article serves as the epilogue to the ".NET vs Java Security" series that has been published by O'Reilly Network over the last several months. Both platforms (J2SE 1.5 and .NET "Whidbey") are expecting significant new releases in the current year, and a brief preview of the upcoming security features is attempted here.
http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2004/07/07/javavsdotnet.html - Jul, 2004 - Java vs. .NET Security, Part 4 by Denis Piliptchouk - [Clicks: 21]
This is the fourth and final article in this series comparing Java and .NET security. It discusses implementations of user authentication and authorization on those platforms. Previous articles of this series covered configuration and code containment in Part 1, cryptography support and the mechanisms of communication protection in Part 2, and code protection and Code Access Security (CAS) in Part 3.
[Includes demo applications]
http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2004/02/25/javavsdotnet.html - Feb, 2004 - Java vs. .NET Security, Part 3 by Denis Piliptchouk - [Clicks: 16]
This is the third article in a series of Java vs. .NET security comparisons. It deals with the issues of code protection and distribution, and Code Access Security (CAS) mechanisms on those platforms. Previous articles of this series covered configuration and code containment in Part 1, and cryptography support and the mechanisms of communication protection in Part 2.
http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2004/01/28/javavsdotnet.html - Jan, 2004