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.

New Domain Name - javawebapps.com

You can now find this site at www.javawebapps.com. Hopefully, this is much easier to remember (and spell) than www.raibledesigns.com. Probably the best $35 I've ever spent and a fairly inexpensive marketing strategy. If you ever need to tell anyone about this site (don't know why you would), you can now use javawebapps.com. Let's see how many times I can type java web apps in this post. I've got to get past Anthony on Google's results wink - he's on page 2 right now (I'm on page 4).

Posted in General at Nov 15 2002, 10:03:27 AM MST Add a Comment

How I started Raible Designs

Lance sent me an e-mail and asked, "I've been thinking of asking you about running your own business. How do you find new contracts and manage your time?" I replied to his e-mail and before I knew it, I had a story. I tend to enjoy weblogs that talk about their experiences and history, so here's a little enjoyment.

In the fall of 1998, I was working as a contractor for IBM Global Services at CoBank. I worked with a guy who wanted me to help him write a ASP-based dating application. Since I was fluent in ASP, we negotiated a rate and began moonlighting on the project after work. To facilitate me working on the project, I had to purchase a computer (Compaq Presario 5020, 64MB RAM, 300Mhz Celeron), and after the first few payments rolled in, I figured I'd better start a company for tax purposes. The project ended up fizzling out halfway through when the guy decided to re-write the whole thing in Servlets/JSP - probably a good decision, eh? With the income from the project, I was able to pay for the computer, file the paperwork for the business, and start Raible Designs, LLC.

In the midst of that project ending, someone at CoBank knew someone else that needed a website. So my first website (www.ccasla.org) for hire was born. I left CoBank for eDeploy.com and worked there for 2 years (through May 2001) as Director of Web Development. I kept doing Raible Designs stuff on the side for about 5-10 hours per week. You can find some early examples at Karen's Discount Bridal, Raskin & Makofsky and The Swan Ecosystem Center. In mid-April 2001, on the same day that I received my shiny new Dell P4 8100, the 2nd round of layoffs happened at eDeploy. There were only 3 rounds (of layoffs), and they announced the doors would be closing 2 weeks later.

So after frantically searching for a job for 2 weeks, I met with Chris Buzzetta from ICSynergy. Funny thing is that a co-worker of Julie's actually hooked me up with the interview - and everything went smooth at pie. One of ICSynergy's suggestions was that you have your own company - or at least work as a 1099 - so having Raible Designs was a big bonus at this point. I started a project with ICS at Douglas County and found myself in the world of Ant, CVS, Javadocs, and all kinds of other good stuff. In early June, I was tasked with developing a UI Framework for the County's J2EE projects, and thankfully stumbled upon Struts. In July 2001, I converted Raible Designs to an S Corp because I was now doing it full time and needed to enhance my company benefits. The DC project ended in late October. BTW, if you need a great accountant for your business, I highly recommend Lisa David of L & B Accounting.

After leaving Douglas County, I searched like a madman for weeks, but to no avail. I sent out resumes, attended User Group meetings, and e-mailed all my friends looking for a new client/job. I wanted to stay working for Raible Designs, but also needed to keep the income flowing. After finding virtually nothing, I hunkered down and satisfied a bunch of certifications (MCSE/MCDBA 2000, SCWCD, BEA Developer). In mid-December, my e-mails to friends paid off and the former CEO of eDeploy (Robert Gadd) sent me an e-mail. He said he was starting a new e-Learning company, needed a developer to produce their web-based product, and that he wanted to hire me. So it's been 11 months now, and I'm still working for Robert's company. He's been the best client in the world, and the relationship is half the fun. I've kept a close relationship with ICSynergy in the meantime, and they've helped me to get certified as a J2EE and Portal Instructor for Sun. I talked with Martin (ICS's head honcho) today and they might even have a new project for me soon.

So to make a long story longer, I find new contracts the same way that most folks find new jobs. I send out resumes (this hardly ever works), I talk to friends and I talk to old co-workers. I think the best way is to get your name out and get people familiar with what you do. Hopefully, blogging will help facilitate this even further. My partnership and friendship at ICSynergy have certainly helped a lot, and I'll be very grateful if I get my next project through them. I think more partnerships like this are definitely needed. Attending user group meetings certainly doesn't hurt. I've found that my domain name is too hard to remember though, so I bought javawebapps.com (pointed to raibledesigns.com) today. I doubt it's up yet.

As for managing my time, it's now getting very difficult with Julie and Abbie at home with me. It doesn't help that my office is in one of our common rooms, and privacy is not possible. My father recommended to spend as much time with my kids as possible, so I doubt I'll move out into a real office, but I should get my own room - with a door that closes. For the most part, I've had great success with early mornings (4 a.m.) and late nights before a release. I definitely manage my time best when I'm working on something I really like. Of course, then I work too much, and maybe that's not good time management either.

Hope this helps. Feel free to post comments or ask me any further questions.

Update: One important thing I forgot to mention. While I was working at Douglas Country, the Tech Lead on my project was Brian Boelsterli. Brian was a Principal of ICSynergy at the time, and has always been a great friend. He and I used to carpool to Castle Rock everyday, and I learned a ton from him about being an Independent Consultant, a good programmer and a good father. I eventually asked him to be my Mentor, to which he kindly accepted. I couldn't ask for a more valuable resource - he's always been full of great advice. So I encourage you to get a mentor if you know of one - all you have to do is ask.

Posted in General at Nov 14 2002, 03:36:07 PM MST 7 Comments

Eclipse 2.0.2 Available from Update Manager

You can now update your Eclipse installation to 2.0.2 from within Eclipse. I recieved the following response from the Eclipse newsgroup regarding the lack of an update initially.

If you really can't wait, you can upgrade without losing anything. Just backup your workspace directory and copy it into the new installation. The Eclipse Wiki has more information on manual upgrading.

I also found the Slime UML plugin on the newsgroup. The bad part? It costs money (EUR 30)!

Posted in General at Nov 14 2002, 09:49:18 AM MST Add a Comment

Improve your VM's Performance

Turbo-charging JavaTM HotSpot Virtual Machine, v1.4.x to Improve the Performance and Scalability of Application Servers Learn how to turbo-charge JVM 1.4.x to get the best performance out of your applications with regards to garbage collection.

I haven't read this yet, but with a title that long - how can it not be good?!

Posted in General at Nov 14 2002, 06:06:08 AM MST Add a Comment

Picture of Me

Julie and Matt, March 02 in Florida Russell linked to a picture of me this morning. I don't think it does me any justice since I'm run ragged from Abbie's birth and I'm sitting there with 15 pregnancy-pounds. So, in hopes of improving my image (nudge, nudge), here is a picture of Julie and I from March of this year.

Posted in General at Nov 13 2002, 11:54:28 AM MST 1 Comment

Installing/Configuring Apache and Tomcat

I found Galatea Flashguides at this early morning hour (2:30 a.m.) while watching Abbie and trying to keep her entertained so Julie can get some sleep. Looks like a great site for how to's for installing Apache, Tomcat, JOnAS, and Cocoon.

Posted in General at Nov 12 2002, 09:36:01 PM MST Add a Comment

Remote Scripting Weblog

Brent Ashley now has a blog. I came to know Brent via his Remote Scripting libraries - particularly the Javascript (JSRS) version. At the time (about 6 months ago), I was trying to write a SCORM implementation using Javascript and Struts. I got it working, but then realized that I needed synchronous communication. Hmmm, in looking at this forum post it appears that Peppoz has implemented SCORM using this same architecture! Cool - sometimes reminiscing does add value.

Posted in General at Nov 12 2002, 01:40:18 PM MST Add a Comment

Eclipse Plugins - Updates

I found these gems on the eclipse.tools newsgroup.

  • A new version of the Jalopy Java Source Code Formatter has been released. Visit the Jalopy home page for more information about this software.
  • Easy Struts 0.6.1 was just released, all the wizards were refactored, a Struts view was added and Struts 1.1 modules are supported. Install it from Update Manager or download it.

Posted in General at Nov 12 2002, 01:21:45 PM MST Add a Comment

Can't get rid of folders

I'm having the same problem on Windows XP that I am on my Mac. On the Mac, I have a folder ASD in my Trash that won't delete. When I try to Empty Trash from the Dock, I get an error stating that the item "ASD" is in use. When I look at the folder and try to remove stuff, nothing is there:

[minime:~] matt% rm -r .Trash/*
rm: .Trash/ASD: Directory not empty
[minime:~] matt% rm -r .Trash/ASD/*
rm: No match.

On XP, I have a similar issue. There is a found.000 folder on my C: drive. In this folder, there is a hidden folder (or at least it has a folder icon) named file0009.chk. When I try to delete it, I get the following error:

Cannot delete file0009.chk: The file or directory is corrupted and unreadable.

Both of these have been bugging me for quite some time - hopefully I can put the comments feature to work for me now!

Posted in General at Nov 11 2002, 08:07:04 PM MST 3 Comments

Veterans Day

My cousin Paul and I are the first men on both sides of my family that haven't been members of the Armed Forces. My father had to serve as he was drafted in his early twenties. His parents (Margaret and Joseph Raible) were career officers and served in WWII. My mother's father (Oliver Hill) was in the Amphibious Corps, which predated the Navy Seals. I thank all these men in my family and all other veterans for giving me the freedom I have. Thanks for making this country safe for my family and for my children.

Posted in General at Nov 11 2002, 02:17:31 PM MST 1 Comment