Clearly, Flex is a robust, mature framework for building rich Internet applications. With the familiarity, tools support, and ease of integration with the Java platform, it is an option that the Java developer community should seriously consider to provid
GDS is in constant evolution and those features are only informative. * (stable) Full AMF3 support. See GDS AMF3 documentation. * (stable) EJB3 services with transparent externalization mechanism and lazy initialized ActionScript 3 beans (Entity Beans / H
to automatically push data from the server to the client in real time. This is obviously a trivial example, but I think it should be relatively straight forward to scale this approach up for more sophisticated apps.
Granite Data Services (GDS) is a free, open source (LGPL'd), alternative to Adobe® LiveCycle® (Flex_ 2+) Data Services for J2EE application servers. It is not, however, a drop-in replacement: you won't be able to simply deploy a Flex 2 Data Services a
Granite Data Services aims to be a free, open source (LGPL'd), alternative to Adobe® Flex™ 2 Data Services for J2EE application servers. Note that alternative does not mean replacement: it rather means that Granite DS supports AMF3 serialization/deser
Granite Data Services aims to be a free, open source (LGPL'd), alternative to Adobe® Flex™ 2 Data Services for J2EE application servers. Note that alternative does not mean replacement: it rather means that Granite DS supports AMF3 serialization/deseri