Dear William,
1) Go for it! Sounds like fun. When this economy with the stupid world war games rolls me under (which is never, I hope) you may find me looking for a job and enhancing my www.HotSciFi.com website with the J2EE discussion group myself. You might want to check out "Joel on Software" for an easy to build, yet very finely designed discussion group/chat room.
2) I would start with JSP/Servlet controller model and use a free easy-to-use JSP engine like tomcat. I would use the full MVC architecture (see Sun Pet Shop or any J2EE book) but leave the concrete names of app-objects out of my code and use the decorator (session controller bean) pattern and DAO architecture for DB, to call simple Java objects right in the servlet layer. This is easy to build (and "correct") and then you can scale to something like JBoss where you can deploy real entity/session enterprise beans with little code change to your JSP/servlet classes.
> I want to get certified in JAVA2EE.
Good for you, but I can't help you here. In my expereince, you'll gain much knowledge from building and deploying the system model you mentioned. Good luck!
Greg the SciFi Super Geek
-----Original Message-----
From: William Rice [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2003 11:23 AM
To: jdjlist
Subject: [jdjlist] Chat rooms
I would like to developed a chartroom with J2EE. I developed on my desktop
and it is not a server class machine, but I have developed java programs on
my machine.
1.) Is this possible?
2.) What classes would I need?
The next question is:
I want to get certified in JAVA2EE.
1.) Is there a certification?
2.) Are there any good books on testing?
Please all help me with these questions!!!
-----Original Message-----
From: TommCatt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2003 1:14 PM
To: JDJList
Subject: [jdjlist] Re: gap between universities and employers ????
From: "Jason Bell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> May I just say as someone with no university education.... never did me
any
> harm....
I worked for years without a degree and there would be times when it
actually worked to my advantage. Large companies usually have a minimum pay
scale determined by experience and degrees. They could offer me less than
the other job applicants with degrees and the same experience. I would, in
effect, go to the head of the line.
However, generally I have found it better to have the degree.
> A CTO and writing for JDJ. Not boasting, but just proving that anything
is
> possible.
Hey, I get JDJ. I guess I'll have to start paying attention to the author's
name when I read an article. 8^)
No offense intended, but I have found that, many times (but there are
exceptions), people who are best at writing about programming are not the
same ones who are best at programming -- and vice versa. Here's hoping
you're one of the exceptions.
In that same vein, many times top notch programmers (developers, Software
Engineers, whatever) can't write a resume to save their life. Top technical
talent tend to be shy and self-effacing. They don't like to brag or bring
undue attention to themselves or their accomplishments. So when I come
across a resume that fairly glows in my hands, my first impulse is to throw
it away.
Tomm
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