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Java Web Development (JSP/Servlets) Services |
| 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.
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- Mitigating Cache Stampedes in Dynamic API Translation Using Java 21 Virtual Threads
The Hidden Cost of API Versioning Hell
Continuous API evolution is non-negotiable in contemporary software development, yet maintaining backward compatibility remains an incredibly expensive and labor-intensive hurdle. Core schema mutations frequently force downstream enterprise clients into disruptive and unplanned refactoring cycles, stalling product velocity.
The typical industry fix — maintaining multiple, hard-coded API routes (e.g., /v1, /v2) — inevitably results in severe codebase sprawl, fractured engineering focus, and massive technical debt for the API provider.
- AGENTS.md Makes Your Java Codebase AI-Agent Ready
The year is 2026, and the way software is built has fundamentally shifted. We are no longer just writing code for other humans to read; we are building systems that AI coding agents, such as Cursor, GitHub Copilot Agent Mode, Claude Code, and autonomous CLI tools, will navigate, debug, and extend.
As Java developers, we are blessed with robust tooling. If you are using Quarkus, you already possess a superpower: Supersonic Subatomic Java with an ultra-fast developer loop, continuous testing, and built-in Dev Services.
- Going Stateless: Scaling MCP Servers to Cloud-Native Java and HTTP
The Model Context Protocol (MCP) completely changed how we connect large language models to real-world data and tools. However, early versions of the protocol had a massive bottleneck for enterprise developers: they relied heavily on stateful, long-lived sessions. If you wanted to scale out your AI tools to handle thousands of concurrent agent workflows, you had to deal with sticky sessions, complex load balancing, and heavy memory overhead.
The newest updates to the MCP specification solve this problem by introducing a completely stateless HTTP foundation. By removing the traditional initialization handshake and session IDs, MCP servers can now function as lightweight, independent microservices.
- Compliance Reporting Without Losing the Spreadsheet or the Control
Compliance-reporting teams keep spreadsheets in the loop for a practical reason: a workbook lets domain experts inspect assumptions, formulas, source rows, and intermediate values without reading a line of application code. That transparency is genuinely useful, and it's a big part of why replacing Excel outright so often fails to stick.
The trouble starts once that workbook becomes part of a repeatable, audited reporting process — a regulatory filing, an IFRS report, a periodic compliance submission. At that point, a shared Excel file isn't enough on its own. What's actually needed is version control, validation, an audit trail, a review step, and a reliable way to connect the spreadsheet's logic to the systems downstream.
- Differential Flamegraphs in Java in Jeffrey Microscope
In the first article, we got started with Jeffrey Microscope and learned to read a single flamegraph — the timeseries, search, tooltips, and the allocation and wall-clock variants. This time we build directly on that foundation and tackle one of Jeffrey's most powerful features for real-world performance work: the differential flamegraph, which compares two recordings and shows you precisely what changed between them.
A single flamegraph tells you where your application spends its time. But the questions that matter most in practice are comparative:
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