Op zoek naar een stage

Posted January 21st, 2011 in Portfolio by Wim

Zoals elk jaar is Optis op zoek naar gemotiveerde studenten die zich willen verdiepen in de wereld van Java of IBM.

Wees er snel bij en stuur uw CV naar info@optis.be

Tot binnenkort.

Job – WebSphere Portal Developer

Posted January 12th, 2011 in Jobs by Wim

Sorry, this entry is only available in Nederlands.

Lotus Connections 3 – Do you have social software?

Posted November 9th, 2010 in IBM by Wim

Yesterday, the 8th of November, IBM officially announced Lotus Connection 3.

Please have a look at IBM’s new social software website and find out what’s new in Lotus Connections 3.

Read more…

The 3 laws of WebSphere Portal

Posted October 13th, 2010 in Uncategorized by andy

A very remarkable and adequete slide came up at Thomas Hurek’s Presentation on ‘Portal Success Factors’. It was brought at the IBM Portal Excellence Conference that is currently held at the Congres Center of Dusseldorf.

It tells us the 3 laws of WebSphere Portal

  1. Everything that goes wrong is the portals fault
  2. Websphere portal will test every organizations definciency in your company
  3. Stress test as early as possible

IBM Project Northstart

Posted October 13th, 2010 in IBM, WebSphere Portal by Wim

IBM Project Northstar’s vision is driven by a common set of beliefs, which have been reinforced by many customer success stories, as well as interviews with CEOs and senior public sector leaders around the world. Our vision is based upon the following key principles:

Context is key. The best Web experiences make all users feel like the experience was custom fit for them – based upon their preferences, device, location, social networks, and behaviors.

Social is everywhere and everywhere is social. According to the latest IBM 2010 CEO study, eight-eight percent of all CEOs picked “getting closer to the customer” as the most important dimension to realizing their strategy over the next five years. Organizations hoping to meaningfully interact with, and listen to, customers must transform their online experience beyond one-way information sharing or “brochure sites”. A more socially-infused experience is now expected, one that supports true dialogue with, and between, customers.

Web Experiences can be both visually pleasing and flexible. You don’t need to sacrifice scalability, flexibility, and manageability to create a graphical, persuasive, and responsive web experience.

Integration must be easy. To create a truly interactive, context-aware Web experience, you must be able to easily leverage and extend existing data sources like CRM systems, social media sites, and back-end applications, as well as other product or cloud-based service you acquire in the future.

Proper measurement can lead to competitive advantage. At a tactical level, analytics are key to determining if you are meeting your business objectives and properly engaging customers. At a more strategic level, analytics are also fundamental to gathering enough information about your customers to truly understand them, making it possible to deliver user-optimized Web experiences that deliver more to your bottom line.

Join the LinkedIn Group

5 Interesting IBM related groups on LinkedIn

Posted August 30th, 2010 in IBM by Wim

This post includes 5 interesting IBM related groups on LinkedIn.

Please join and start discussions with other experts!

  • ILog User Group – join
  • IBM WebSphere DataPower – join
  • IBM WebSphere PortalNOW User Group – join
  • IBM WebSphere Lombardi Specialists – join
  • IBM WebSphere Portal experts – join

Relaunch your career

Posted August 24th, 2010 in Portfolio by Wim

Are you ready to relaunch your career at Optis?

Optis is constantly looking for new motivated talent in the area of Java and J2EE.

An overview of open vacancies can be found on our job website (www.jobsatoptis.be)

Vote for the most popular Java Application Server in 2009

Posted January 13th, 2010 in Java, Optis by Wim

Years ago the industry jumped onto the J2EE bandwagen to build and run portalable Java code on any application server. Of course everybody made a choice for a particular brand (WebSphere, WebLogic, TomCat, JRun, Silverstream, …)

If you would have to make the choice today again, which criteria would influence your choice now and what yould be your shortlist?

The most popular Java Application Server in 2009

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And why?

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Top 15 developerWorks WebSphere articles of 2009

Posted January 4th, 2010 in IBM by Wim

Check out 15 of the most popular WebSphere-related articles published on developerWorks in 2009 …

A day at Devoxx

Posted November 18th, 2009 in Java by Wim

Today I attended the first conference day at Devoxx, which is actually day 3 (first 2 days are university days).

The start of the day was in a way a disappointment since, as many developpers, I wanted to know more about the acquisition of Sun by Oracle and the future of Java. But since it is still an EU-issue, the keynote wasn’t really about that. Instead Sun and Oracle both had a seperate keynote. The last keynote was of Adobe which showed an overall view of some of the products they develop.

I was very interested too see Scott Ambler’s presentation. This presentation was about the agile vs the traditional vs the ad hoc development. Scott showed 20 myths about agile development and proved by statistics if they we’re right or wrong. Some examples:

  • Agile is just for small teams
  • Most agile temas are co-located
  • Agilists don’t write supporting documentation.

After showing the facts, all these myths proved to be incorrect. This presentation was great and Scott really is a wonderfull speaker, but what I missed in this presentation was his opinion about this mythes and how things could be better.

After lunch I stumbled upon the presentation about HTML5 Communications. I first attended James Gosling’s presentation, but since it seemed like a marketing presentation about the Java Store, so when the sound system broke down (for all rooms!) I switched rooms. The talk about Frank Greco was very good. Due to this HTML 5 event model, which will change a lot for all nextgen webapps. He even mention that the mashup-functionality of portals will become obsolete!

“Traditional Programming Models: Stone Knives and Bearskins in the Google Age” by Cameron Purdy used ‘Google’ in their name to get more attention, but it certainly was an interesting talk about distributed programming.

The most interesting talk of the day was without a doubt Doug Tidwell about Cloud computing. The presentation talked about solutions for the challenges cloud computing had, and Doug garanteed that Cloud Computing is the next big thing since the evolution of the web. And since we are all using cloud computing in our daily lives, he’s probably right.

The last presentation of the day I attended was about Lift, a framework for Scala. Timothy Perret started with an introduction to Scala, and after that went to Lift showing demo’s and code, which made it very straight-forward to follow.