Java and its future in biomedical computing.
AUTOR(ES)
Rodgers, R P
RESUMO
Java, a new object-oriented computing language related to C++, is receiving considerable attention due to its use in creating network-sharable, platform-independent software modules (known as "applets") that can be used with the World Wide Web. The Web has rapidly become the most commonly used information-retrieval tool associated with the global computer network known as the Internet, and Java has the potential to further accelerate the Web's application to medical problems. Java's potentially wide acceptance due to its Web association and its own technical merits also suggests that it may become a popular language for non-Web-based, object-oriented computing.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=116314Documentos Relacionados
- Interactive molecular biology computing.
- Adaptability, reusability and variability in software systems for space on-board computing.
- Science education and popularization of science in the biomedical area: its role for the future of science and of society
- Integração de bancos de dados heterogêneos utilizando grades computacionais.
- JAtlasView: a Java atlas-viewer for browsing biomedical 3D images and atlases