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Java became popular on the Internet due to the small java applets in 1995. Java applets provided great looking web sites. Java became pouplar due to its cross platform support. Java Appliction runs same on Windows as on Linux/Unix/Mac. JSP and Java Servlets are used for server side programming to create dynamic pages which change with every request. We have JSP/ Servlet programmers/developers. We can provide all kind of java web development services. Contact us for a free quote.


Java Web Development News and Articles

  • Optimizing Java Applications for Arm64 in the Cloud

    Java remains one of the most popular languages for enterprise applications running on the cloud. While languages like Go, Rust, JavaScript, and Python have a high profile for cloud application developers, the RedMonk language rankings have ranked Java in the top three most popular languages throughout the history of the ranking.

    When deploying applications to the cloud, there are a few key differences between deployment environments and development environments. Whether you’re spinning up a microservice application on Kubernetes or launching virtual machine instances, it is important to tune your Java Virtual Machine (JVM) to ensure that you are getting your money’s worth from your cloud spend. It pays to know how the JVM allocates resources and to ensure you use them efficiently.



  • Virtual Threads in JDK 21: Revolutionizing Java Multithreading

    What is Virtual Thread

    Multi-threading is a widely used feature across the industry for developing Java-based applications. It allows us to run operations in parallel, enabling faster task execution. The number of threads created by any Java application is limited by the number of parallel operations the OS can handle; in other words, the number of threads in a Java application is equal to the number of OS threads. Until now, this limitation has created a bottleneck on further scaling any application, considering the current fast-paced ecosystem. 

    To overcome this limitation, Java has introduced the concept of Virtual Thread in JDK21. A Java application creates a Virtual Thread and is not associated with any OS thread. It means every Virtual Thread does not need to be dependent on a Platform Thread (aka OS thread). Virtual Thread will work on any task independently and will acquire a Platform Thread only when it needs to perform any I/O operation. 



  • How to Test POST Requests With REST Assured Java for API Testing: Part II

    In the previous article, we learnt the basics, setup, and configuration of the REST Assured framework for API test automation. We also learnt to test a POST request with REST Assured by sending the request body as:

    1. String
    2. JSON Array/ JSON Object
    3. Using Java Collections
    4. Using POJO

    In this tutorial article, we will learn the following:



  • Designing Java Web Services That Recover From Failure Instead of Breaking Under Load

    Web applications depend on Java-based services more than ever. Every request that comes from a browser, a mobile app, or an API client eventually reaches a backend service that must respond quickly and consistently. When traffic increases or a dependency slows down, many Java services fail in ways that are subtle at first and catastrophic later. A delay becomes a backlog. A backlog becomes a timeout. A timeout becomes a full service outage.

    The goal of a reliable web service is not to avoid every failure. The real goal is to recover from failure fast enough that users never notice. What matters is graceful recovery.



  • Stop Writing Excel Specs: A Markdown-First Approach to Enterprise Java

    Design documents in Enterprise Java often end up trapped in binary silos like Excel or Word, causing them to drift away from the actual code. This pattern shows how to treat Design Docs as source code by using structured Markdown and generative AI.

    We've all been there: the architecture team delivers a Detailed Design Document (DDD) to the development team. It’s a 50-page Word file, even worse, a massive Excel spreadsheet with multiple tabs defining Java classes, fields, and validation rules.



 
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