Wicket is a lightweight, component-oriented framework that does much to bring the easy, intuitive interfaces found in desktop applications to Java Web development. In this series Nathan Hamblen (of databinder and coderspiel blog ) introduces key aspects of Wicket that differentiate it from other Web application frameworks This first ( of 3 ) article investigates Wicket's virtual state, demonstrating the many ways Wicket accommodates both stateless and stateful Web application development.
mainly marketing articlle by cofiiunder What if you didn't have to do any of this funny business to get scalability and reliability? What if the JVM had access to a service that you could plug into to make its heap durable, arbitrarily large, and shared with every other JVM in your application tier? Enter Terracotta, network-attached, durable virtual heap for the JVM. In the spirit of full-disclosure, I'm a co-founder of Terracotta and work there as a software developer. Terracotta is an infrastructure service that is deployed as a stand-alone server plus a library that plugs into your existing JVMs and transparently clusters your JVM's heap. Terracotta makes some of your JVM heap shared via a network connection to the Terracotta server so that a bunch of JVMs can all access the shared heap as if it were local heap. You can think of it like a network-attached filesystem, but for your object data; see Figure 1.