Title
Java, the Web, and Software Development
Abstract
The author discusses how the World Wide Web and Java mark the death of fatware and the birth of dynamic computing built on rented components. The real paradigm shift will be the replacement of purchased software packages with transaction-oriented rental of Java applets attached to Web pages. In the move to a full-scale Internet based application development environment, developers are grappling with seven key issues: how to integrate e-mail, FTP, and HTML; the absolute need for security; the dearth of high-end visual tools; configuration management and version control; support for a flexible, sophisticated user interface; a common development environment; and performance, which has several components. Each of these issues are discussed by the author
Year
DOI
Venue
1996
10.1109/2.532042
IEEE Computer
Keywords
DocType
Volume
Java mark,application development environment,absolute need,author discusses,dynamic computing,common development environment,Java applets,Web page,Software Development,configuration management,World Wide Web
Journal
29
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
8
0018-9162
23
PageRank 
References 
Authors
3.43
0
1
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Edward Yourdon14210.87