MyEclipse 9.1: Lose Your Job for Choosing Anything Else
06Jul2011
Versions 9.1 debuts the In-Workspace mode to deploy projects to WebSphere® in mere seconds
Genuitec has announced the immediate availability of MyEclipse Workbench Enterprise Edition 9.1, MyEclipse Blue Edition 9.1 and MyEclipse for Spring 9.1. Specifically, MyEclipse Blue Edition is the smartest and most useful developer tool stack on the market for enterprises needing the power of IBM®-centric technologies without the costs, vendor lock-in or weight of legacy solutions.
For MyEclipse Blue users (a clear alternative to IBM Rational® at only US $160 annually), a new In-Workspace technology dramatically reduces project deployment time down to a few seconds and is designed to synchronize the resources and code that is handled by WebSphere® directly. This mode is most appropriate for rapid application evolution while debugging projects in real time.
"Users of MyEclipse know they have the most powerful - yet affordable - developer tools on the market," said Brian Fernandes, project manager for the MyEclipse product line. "Genuitec recently celebrated 10 years in the enterprise software development business, and we’ve built our company by transforming the value enterprises should expect from their tooling."
Technology advancements, besides the recent release of Java EE6 and HTML5 support, gives developers the power to benefit from the EJB Deploy tool for EAR or EJB projects which can be deployed to WebSphere® 6.1 up to the current version 8. This brand new technology allows developers to turn off the EJB deploy step during deployment resulting in a much faster deployment experience. Run the EJB Deploy manually only when required to save loads of time and valuable system resources.
MyEclipse Standard, Pro and Spring users also have access to improved Cocoa Support, so when installing on OS X Cocoa based systems, users now get the option of choosing between Carbon 32-bit, Cocoa 32-bit or Cocoa 64-bit.
Other key enhancements include several new JavaScript code analysis modes to allow users to tailor the JavaScript feature set to suit their specific needs while saving on memory and performance issues. And, ICEfaces 2 is now supported, it is a development framework based on the JavaServer Faces (JSF) 2 standard; it extends JSF to simplify development and enhance the standard JSF feature set – other newly-added support includes JPA 2.0, JSF 2.0, Eclipselink 2.1 and Apache's OpenJPA 2.0 release.


