1,612 captures
19 Jun 2000 - 03 Jan 2026
Feb MAR Apr
11
2003 2004 2005
success
fail

About this capture

COLLECTED BY

Collection: Institut national de l?audiovisuel

Crawl data from Institut national de l?audiovisuel in France. This data is currently not publicly accessible.

from Wikipedia:
The Institut national de l'audiovisuel (or INA, French for National Audiovisual Institute), is a repository of all French radio and television audiovisual archives. Since 2006, it has allowed free online consultation on a website called ina.fr with a search tool indexing 100,000 archives of historical programs, for a total of 20,000 hours.

TIMESTAMPS

The Wayback Machine - http://web.archive.org/web/20040311064106/http://www.jdom.org:80/
 

  

     
     

Project
  News and Status
  Mission
  Specification
  JavaDoc
  FAQ
  Quotes

Downloads
  Binaries
  Source
  Documentation

Get Involved
  Overview
  Mailing Lists

Credits
  Who We Are
  Acknowledgements

Want Servlet Hosting?
Want Java! - Your source for Java hosting
 

"Build a better mousetrap, and the world will
beat a path to your door."
--Emerson

Our Mission? To build a complete, Java-based solution for accessing, manipulating, and outputting XML data from Java code. Read more about our project goals.
Project Status? We've made major strides, and now JDOMTM Beta 9 is available and we're cranking onward. Check it out and talk about it on the mailing lists today.
The Latest?

JDOM Beta 10 Release Candidate #1 is now available. This release is expected to be the last Beta before 1.0. You're encouraged to check it out and send in any comments early so they can be considered for the 1.0 release. Get it now.

Jason has set up a weblog on Servlets.com with a JDOM category. To read the JDOM blog, click here.

JDOM was accepted as JSR-102! A JSR is how formal Java specifications are defined, and having JDOM as a JSR will facilitate JDOM's corporate adoption and open the door for JDOM to be incorporated into the core Java Platform. For more information, see the News page.

If you wonder what Jason has been doing lately, he's been playing with XQuery. XQuery is a new W3C language and the only thing that makes XML manipulation as easy as JDOM.

What's Next?

We're shipping 1.0 in Q1 2004.