The JavaZone 2009 conference is over, and although I couldn’t make it this year due to our project, StreamFlow, going into production soon, the Qi was definitely flowing there. I’ve been watching the videos from the conference (available here, and many kudos for making them available so soon), and there’s a number of presentations which either explicitly or implicitly relates to Qi4j. It seems that so many of the issues that Qi4j has been designed to deal with are things that are becoming known and annoying to a majority of developers. So, I’ll try to outline below just how the topics covered at JavaZone relate to Qi4j, and how Qi4j can help you deal with those problems.
Qi4j and domain model persistence
September 24th, 2009 by Rickard Öberg — Architecture, Java
Tags: domain model, frameworks, persistence, qi4j
Neo – a netbase
February 1st, 2007 by Björn Granvik — Java
Neo is a network-oriented database for semi-structured information. Too complicated, let us try again. Neo handles data in networks – nodes, relationships and properties – instead of tables. This means entirely new solutions for data that is diffi cult to handle in static tables. It could mean we can go agile all the way into [...]
Tags: frameworks, graph db, innovation, persistence
