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Weblog Archive Cutedge

by: Bernard Teo








Creative Commons License

Copyright © 2003-2012
Bernard Teo
Some Rights Reserved.

Tue 24 Aug 2004

WebLogic

Category : Technology/WebLogic.txt

We've got WebLogic running on the Mac. WebLogic is a Java J2EE-class application server.

We're setting up a demo for Apple Singapore that will show WebLogic integrated with Oracle and running on an Xserve :

The figure above shows the WebLogic console. All the examples work, including support for multiple languages, like Japanese. And support for encrypted communications between browser and server, via SSL. The Xserve is running OS X Panther Server.

More importantly for us, LucaWeb - the web browser-based version of our Luca Accounting System - also works on WebLogic. That's what we will be able to demo - plus having the data coming out of an Oracle 10g database, sitting on the same Xserve.

Isn't OS X great? That brings to three the number of Java application servers we know we can run on - Tomcat, JBoss, and now, WebLogic. Total code portability. And reusability. That's freedom of choice.

Posted at 12:24PM UTC | permalink

Freedom of Choice

Category : Commentary/freedomOfChoice.txt

In this article, "Consumers Say Apple Should Share", there's this last paragraph :

According to GartnerG2's McGuire, "the real test for Apple and everybody else in the online music world will be when Microsoft unleashes its online store--and when portability comes to subscription services such as Rhapsody and Napster's premium services." In this case, he said it might be difficult to successfully run a proprietary format, "as the market choices expand, and consumers become more aware of them."

"The real test will be when Microsoft unleashes its online store..." "in this case, it might be difficult to successfully run a proprietary format..."

As if Microsoft won't be pushing a "proprietary format" of its own?

"Consumers are always going to want choice." But we're already exercising our right to choose by choosing the Mac. And the iPod.

The difference between the Mac and the iPod is that the iPod is outside the reach of IT Departments. People buy what they want and there are no Thought Police around to ban the iPod on ideological grounds - like that contorted definition of what it means to be proprietary.

The business press is still waiting for Apple to fall flat from its "proprietary" leanings. What if, instead of dying, Apple grows from strength to strength with its iPods? Won't it be time to rewrite the history books?

Microsoft didn't win the "platform wars" because its strategy was manifest destiny. If it were so, it will win this war, easily too. So, let's wait and see.

Posted at 12:17PM UTC | permalink

Mac@Work
Put your Mac to Work

Sivasothi.com? Now how would you do something like that?

Weblogs. Download and start a weblog of your own.

A Mac Business Toolbox
A survey of the possibilities

A Business Scenario
How we could use Macs in businesses

VPN Enabler for Mavericks

MailServe for Mavericks

DNS Enabler for Mavericks

DNS Agent for Mavericks

WebMon for Mavericks

Luca for Mavericks

Liya for Mountain Lion & Mavericks

Postfix Enabler for Tiger and Panther

Sendmail Enabler for Jaguar

Services running on this server, a Mac Mini running Mac OS X 10.9.2 Mavericks:

  • Apache 2 Web Server
  • Postfix Mail Server
  • Dovecot IMAP Server
  • Fetchmail
  • SpamBayes Spam Filter
  • Procmail
  • BIND DNS Server
  • DNS Agent
  • WebDAV Server
  • VPN Server
  • PHP-based weblog
  • MySQL database
  • PostgreSQL database

all set up using MailServe, WebMon, DNS Enabler, DNS Agent, VPN Enabler, Liya and our SQL installers, all on Mavericks.