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Lotus posts Domino driver for JDBC 1.1
Lotus has posted its Domino Driver for JDBC 1.1 that lets Java programmers access Lotus Domino databases as easily as other relational databases...
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Sep 23, 1999
Making the move to Java?
Domino developers revolt over Java plans
Lotus Software has irked some Domino developers by announcing support for Java 2 Enterprise Edition 1.3 in future versions of its Notes and Domino groupware platform. Some developers say parent company IBM is forcing J2EE on them merely because of internal corporate politics...
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Jan 31, 2002
Microsoft courts uncertain Domino developers
Look for a series of initiatives from Redmond that will let Domino developers create Notes- and Domino-based Web services using Microsoft development tools such as Visual Studio .Net and Visual Basic. The projects are designed to exploit Domino programmer fears that Lotus is nudging them away from LotusScript and toward Java...
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Jan 19, 2004
Lotus: Domino to converge with Workplace
officials said users can expect to see the same features in Lotus Workplace as in Domino and Notes. Their plan is to merge the product lines and have current Domino customers become Workplace customers. Domino would be one component in Workplace, the Java-based, componentized collaboration offering based on WebSphere and DB2...
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Oct 7, 2003
Related Notes Articles
Enabling protocols on your Lotus Domino server
The following is tip #8 from "Managing Lotus Domino servers -- 15 tips in 15 minutes," excerpted from Chapter 14 of the book Lotus Notes and Domino 6 System Administrator Exam Cram 2, published by Sams Publishing. Your Lotus Domino server supports... More... Dec 8, 2005
Developer University: Domino, Java and J2EE
If you work with Domino, you need to know more than Domino. Our Domino, Java and J2EE Developer University provides resources, definitions, articles, tips, webcasts and other advice on all three topics -- all in one place.
TABLE OF CONTENTS Getting started LotusScript vs... More... Apr 5, 2004
Look back in Java: The Java vs LotusScript opinion page
you aren't forced to either handle or declare every possible error condition."
Finally, financial-services developer Brian Mahoney opines that the biggest "Gotcha!" for beginning Domino Java developers is the need to recycle. "When Java accesses Domino, it is doing so using the C API," he writes. "Unlike LotusScript, which does extensive cleanup and garbage collection for you, you need to... More... Jan 14, 2005
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