The j661 project provides a generic CDS (or ARINC 661 Server) in order to facilitate the understanding of the ARINC 661 standard, prototype ARINC 661 concepts and architectures, and facilitate the reuse of ARINC 661 specifications and artefacts between projects. The CDS architecture is designed to allow defining the Server behavior to be easily modified or extended. This is achieved by a modular plug-in architecture, allowing customization at runtime without changing anything in the Server core itself.
javaXUL provides a simple to use XUL implementation, including CSS and JavaScript capabilities, for use in Java projects. Some uses include the embedding of an XUL stack in a Java browser and using XUL as a UI language in Java applications, including the ability to communicate with Java. It is not intended to compete with much more complete RIA offerings such as Flash, Silverlight, or javaFX. Instead it tries to leverage the expressivity of XUL in the Java development area. Compatibility with Mozilla XUL (such as the Firefox implementation) is a goal.
MDIFramework provides a ready-to-use architecture to ease the creation MDI-style applications in Java. It takes care of the overall architecture of the main window of the application, with a tabbed architecture, the presence of an HTML printable message area, and so on. It provides a generic API to manage lengthy actions, keeping the interface responsive, and taking care that actions are performed one at a time, without having to bother about it. It can add metadata to already opened files. It manages loading and unloading of external plugins at runtime.
A non-graphical .NET Project management component which enables .NET applications to read, write, and manage Project documents without utilizing Microsoft Project.