Juxta is an open-source tool for comparing and collating multiple witnesses to a single textual work. Originally designed to aid scholars and editors examine the history of a text from manuscript to print versions, Juxta offers a number of possibilities for humanities computing and textual scholarship.
If you've been using the imageIO.write method to save JPEG images, you may notice that some image lose quality. This is because you can't instruct the imagIO.write method to apply a certain compression quality to the images.
Make your development easier through the use of JDK5's annotation feature. The objective is to spend less time on unhandy code-writing and focus more on business logic rules.
Ibator will introspect a database table (or many tables) and will generate iBATIS artifacts that can be used to access the table(s). This lessens the initial nuisance of setting up objects and configuration files to interact with database tables. Ibator seeks to make a major impact on the large percentage of database operations that are simple CRUD (Create, Retrieve, Update, Delete). You will still need to hand code SQL and objects for join queries, or stored procedures.
D. Johnson, and T. Jankun-Kelly. Proceedings of graphics interface 2008, page 163--168. Toronto, Ont., Canada, Canada, Canadian Information Processing Society, (2008)