MongoDB Atlas is the developer-friendly database used to build, scale, and run gen AI and LLM-powered apps—without needing a separate vector database. Atlas offers built-in vector search, global availability across 115+ regions, and flexible document modeling. Start building AI apps faster, all in one place.
Start Free
Cloud-based help desk software with ServoDesk
Full access to Enterprise features. No credit card required.
What if You Could Automate 90% of Your Repetitive Tasks in Under 30 Days? At ServoDesk, we help businesses like yours automate operations with AI, allowing you to cut service times in half and increase productivity by 25% - without hiring more staff.
This library intends to make JSON very easy to interact with in Java
This library intends to make JSON very easy to interact with in Java; it also makes (de)serialization painless. It wraps around the well-known org.json classes (JSONObject, JSONArray, etc.) which also happen to be included in the Android SDK. As we all know, those stock classes tend to be a pain. They feel bulky, and make you try/catch way too many exceptions.
This is the Java client SDK for the Velisphere Internet of Things Cloud System. It provides tools and libraries to develop clients that connect as devices or services (with sensors, actors and other configurable function) to Velisphere, where you can connect them with other devices based on an easy to build rules-system, analyze data, locate devices, remote manage them, store binary data in a "dropbox for things", etc.
Simplified multithreaded Java HTTP server able to interpret GET/POST requests.
Example dummy app included. It uses Apache2 as a proxy for AJAX calls and jQuery code as a client.
-------
Requirements:
For the Java HTTP server:
- J2SE (SDK for compilation)
For the exampe web app:
- Apache2 with mod_rewrite and mod_proxy
Client-side for the web app:
- www browser supporting JS with jQuery
---
Setup:
- run Server.class from Java server files (java Server) in a terminal/console
- unpack example app files under/within your apache2 document root file structure
- open index.html (with a www browser, from a www server)
- observe terminal output