I don't disagree with that (although check the EOL note here [1]),
still this shouldn't matter. Consider that Cayenne being Java 1.4 in
the recent past did not prevent us from fully supporting enums. The
mechanism to develop and test multi-JDK extensions is there, so if we
see a benefit, we can easily start adding Java6-only features.
To me personally the turning point in my interest in Java 6 was Apple
releasing the JDK for Mac about a month ago. Until then I didn't
bother to look this way.
Andrus
[1] http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index_jdk5.jsp
On May 27, 2008, at 1:07 PM, Malcolm Edgar wrote:
> I think the commercial app servers have just stablised on Java 5. I
> imagine
> it will be a while (years) before they are Java 6.
>
> regards Malcolm Edgar
>
> On Tue, May 27, 2008 at 7:23 PM, Andrus Adamchik <andru..bjectstyle.org
> >
> wrote:
>
>> My understanding that this is for the "classic" web services (think
>> Axis,
>> etc.)
>>
>> Andrus
>>
>>
>> On May 27, 2008, at 11:19 AM, Aristedes Maniatis wrote:
>>
>>> On 27/05/2008, at 9:51 AM, Jon Sharp wrote:
>>>
>>> We are using Cayenne 3.0M3 for ORM in our project and are exposing
>>> this
>>>> database using SOAP Web Services. We're using the latest Sun
>>>> Metro stack
>>>> (1.2), consisting of the JAX-WS and JAXB frameworks.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I don't know much yet about these technologies, so I'm curious
>>> about what
>>> you are doing. Are you using them in a client/server ROP scenario
>>> in place
>>> of Hessian for serialising objects, or is this in place of
>>> something like
>>> Axis to provide SOAP services to an unrelated system which doesn't
>>> have
>>> access to the Cayenne data map?
>>>
>>> Cheers
>>> Ari
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> -------------------------->
>>> ish
>>> http://www.ish.com.au
>>> Level 1, 30 Wilson Street Newtown 2042 Australia
>>> phone +61 2 9550 5001 fax +61 2 9550 4001
>>> GPG fingerprint CBFB 84B4 738D 4E87 5E5C 5EFA EF6A 7D2E 3E49 102A
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
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