Portlets constitute interactive Web application components whose presentation markup is aggregated and displayed by a portal server like WebSphere Portal. In a previous WebSphere Journal article, we introduced you to the Java Specification Request for the portlet specification (JSR 168... Jan. 4, 2005 12:00 AM EST Reads: 16,489 |
The Java Specification Request for the Portlet Specification (a.k.a. JSR 168), articulated by the Java Community Process in October 2003, aims to provide a standard for portlets that the portal arena has lacked. Portlets that are written to the JSR 168 spec will be deployable to any JS...May. 5, 2004 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 18,634 |
The Java Specification Request for the Portlet Specification (a.k.a. JSR 168), articulated by the Java Community Process in October 2003, aims to provide a standard for portlets that the portal arena has lacked. Portlets that are written to the JSR 168 spec will be deployable to any JS... Mar. 31, 2004 12:00 AM EST Reads: 10,061 |







Andrew Sweet serves as a senior solution architect for IBM’s WebSphere Services and is a frequent speaker and mentor around enterprise best practices and standards-based technologies such as J2EE and Web services. Andy also has served on the boards of several industry standards groups and technology councils, including OASIS WS-Security and UDDI, Web Services on WebSphere (WoW), IBM’s WebSphere Advisory Board, and Washington University’s Center for the Application of Information Technology program.
The Java Specification Request for the Portlet Specification (a.k.a. JSR 168), articulated by the Java Community Process in October 2003, aims to provide a standard for portlets that the portal arena has lacked. Portlets that are written to the JSR 168 spec will be deployable to any JS...


























