Matt RaibleMatt Raible is a writer with a passion for software. Connect with him on LinkedIn.

The Angular Mini-Book The Angular Mini-Book is a guide to getting started with Angular. You'll learn how to develop a bare-bones application, test it, and deploy it. Then you'll move on to adding Bootstrap, Angular Material, continuous integration, and authentication.

Spring Boot is a popular framework for building REST APIs. You'll learn how to integrate Angular with Spring Boot and use security best practices like HTTPS and a content security policy.

For book updates, follow @angular_book on Twitter.

The JHipster Mini-Book The JHipster Mini-Book is a guide to getting started with hip technologies today: Angular, Bootstrap, and Spring Boot. All of these frameworks are wrapped up in an easy-to-use project called JHipster.

This book shows you how to build an app with JHipster, and guides you through the plethora of tools, techniques and options you can use. Furthermore, it explains the UI and API building blocks so you understand the underpinnings of your great application.

For book updates, follow @jhipster-book on Twitter.

10+ YEARS


Over 10 years ago, I wrote my first blog post. Since then, I've authored books, had kids, traveled the world, found Trish and blogged about it all.

Sun is spewing knowledge again.

For those that aren't up to speed on JSTL, here's a new tutorial: Faster Development with JavaServer PagesTM Standard Tag Library (JSTL 1.0). Also, this Tuesday, Craig McClanahan and Amy Fowler, Spec leads of JSF, will host a live chat on JSF. The bad part, it's at 8:00 AM Eastern time which means that I'll have to get up at 6:00 to catch it. I'm a pretty good morning person, so shouldn't be too hard. I've been practicing for the little one lately by going to bed between midnight and 2:00 AM and then waking up again at 6:00 AM. Hope it works.

Posted in General at Oct 05 2002, 09:35:32 AM MDT Add a Comment

Hang in there Russ.

If you're having a bad week or day, all you have to do is read Russ's situation to feel better.

Russell Beattie has had a tough week, but he is OK - at least in the physical world. In the digital world of cyberspace, however, he is not doing so well. First, he lost his client by accidentally installing Linux over his Windows partition. Next, he lost his server because his ISP, CWIHosting.com, has mysteriously shut down his account. CWIHosting tells him this is because of "police reasons." The CWIHosting support people told him that he needs to email the CTO and CEO to get any further information. Unfortunately, they are not responding to his emails. He is a little worried that he might not be allowed to get into his account and rescue his weblog archives. That is a scary thought.

Russell thinks that "police reasons" might be actually be a mis-spelling of "policy reasons" and perhaps he simply overloaded his shared Java VM by misconfiguring something when he set up OSCache. I hope that is the case. Anyway, Russell is setting up a new account at JohnCompanies.com ISP and hopes to be back on line by Monday or Tuesday. [ Blogging Roller ]

Russ seems like a pretty wholesome guy to me, so I'm guessing it's policy reasons not policing reasons. Nothing like having your site locked out to motivate you to switch hosting providers. I dream of the day, as I'm sure many of you do, that I can host my own site, and not worry about these things. I can't because my ISP doesn't give out static IPs. At the same time, kgbinternet.com hosts this site for $12/month and I get my own Tomcat instance!

I found a cool Mozilla feature while writing this post. I went to Dave's site to copy Russ's story, selected the story, and found "View Selection Source" on my right-click menu. What could be more beautiful on a Saturday afternoon? Me being done with work for the week, but no - I probably have another 10-12 hours to put in this weekend. It's gonna be a late night tonight.

Posted in The Web at Oct 05 2002, 09:25:14 AM MDT Add a Comment

Mount FTP Servers in OS X.

I found another tasty treat on Ken Bereskin's Radio Weblog:

Today's feature: FTP servers mount in the Finder. Go to the Connect to Server... command in the Finder and type in a valid ftp URL (ftp://ftp.mozilla.org for example). Voila, the server is available as a mounted, read-only volume.

Posted in Mac OS X at Oct 04 2002, 03:49:09 PM MDT 3 Comments

Struts and XDoclet.

The last release of XDoclet has many more Struts-related features; such as building your validator.xml file and support for adding plug-ins to your struts-config.xml. It seems that a lot of work has been done by Erik Hatcher to make this happen. Is this the same Erik Hatcher that wrote the Ant book I'm reading? I think so. Erik sent this e-mail to the struts-dev mailing list this morning with a brief how-to on integrating XDoclet and Struts.

Posted in Java at Oct 04 2002, 05:56:05 AM MDT Add a Comment

Don't like Flash?

Try playing around with this site for a while and see if it changes your mind. I was mesmerized for a good 5 minutes just clicking and enjoying. Found via youngpup.net.

Posted in The Web at Oct 03 2002, 08:55:51 PM MDT Add a Comment

Cool OS X Blog.

I stumbled upon All OS X while looking for a good screen capture utility for OS X. There, I found the following lovely tidbit:

Tips for Ten: Capture That Window
Take a Picture of your screen With Mac OS X v10.2, you now have yet another option for capturing screen shots. To review, here are the two options you’re probably already familiar with:

1.   Type Command-Shift-3 to take a screen shot of your entire screen.
2.   Type Command-Shift-4 and Mac OS X presents you with crosshairs you can use to select whatever portion of your display you’d like to capture in a screen shot.

And here’s the new option:

3.   Immediately hit the spacebar after typing Command-Shift-4. Instead of crosshairs, you’ll see a little camera. Move the camera around to highlight the Dock, the menu bar, the desktop, or any open window. Then just click the mouse button to “snap” a screen shot. In fact, with this option, you can entirely eliminate the desktop when you capture a screen shot of an individual window.

Here's proof that it actually works. It's pretty cool how it just puts a PDF on your desktop and then you can use Preview (the application) to export to almost any image format, including Photoshop. I really dig this - I'd love a similar "feature" on XP and Red Hat 8.0.

Posted in Mac OS X at Oct 03 2002, 06:40:17 PM MDT 1 Comment

Ant 1.5.1 Released!

It doesn't appear like there are too many changes, but there's a new version nevertheless. As most of you open source developers know, it's much easier to keep up with the lastest version (or nightly builds) than to try to migrate when a new version comes out. If you don't, you mind end up with a XDoclet nightmare similar to the one I'm having with Roller.

Posted in General at Oct 03 2002, 04:08:37 PM MDT Add a Comment

PayPal has (free) BillPay.

I logged into PayPal tonight to pay my Web Hosting provider - and found they now have a FREE BillPay Service. Best of all - they actually had a list of Vendors that I've payed recently. I guess they get this from my bank account. Pretty cool though - I'll be using it shortly and I'll eliminate the last three bills I have to write checks for.

Posted in General at Oct 03 2002, 03:19:16 PM MDT Add a Comment

More RAM, installed.

Dell support came through for me in a matter of minutes. About 45 minutes after I e-mailed them from support.dell.com, I received this:

If you upgrade the memory, the RIMMs must be upgraded in matched pairs of identical MB capacity in both sockets 1 and 2 or sockets 3 and 4. Be sure to install RIMMs in the first two sockets nearest the processor before installing RIMMs in the outer two sockets. RIMM slots without memory modules need to be populated with continuity.

So I installed them in pairs - and whalla! 1 Gig o' RAM

Posted in General at Oct 03 2002, 02:09:27 PM MDT Add a Comment

Apache moving from Bugzilla to Scarab?

I think it's true. While trying to remember Struts' URL for bugzilla tonight, I typed in nagoya.apache.org. Good stuff found there. Why was I going to Bugzilla for Struts? Because I don't think Roller is listed as a Powered by Struts site. This e-mail turned me on to this fact. This site is on there, but only because of Roller - so I figured I'd enter a bug for it.

Posted in Java at Oct 03 2002, 12:22:19 PM MDT Add a Comment