Three Judges to Review Java Ruling on Thursday 29
Richard Finney writes " Reuter's Peter Kaplan is reporting that a three-judge panel in Richmond, Va. will hear arguments from Microsoft and Sun over whether it should uphold a Java 'must-carry' order imposed by a lower court judge in December. Here's a quick review of the issue: Microsoft signed an agreement with Sun on implementing Java. Microsoft implemented a non-compliant version ('embrace, extend, destroy' to their critics). Sun called them on it and as 'pushishment,' the courts said Microsoft had to carry the official Sun product for a while. Microsoft's lawyers seem to be on a winning streak lately and their spokesman Jim Dresler says the order is 'unprecedented, unnecessary and doesn't serve the public interest.' Some say this the deciding battle between Java and .NET. Too bad it's not being settled on the technical merits of both products."
Cross platform (Score:2)
Rus
Re:Cross platform (Score:3, Interesting)
What is broken about Java2?
Re:Not Cross-Platform? (Score:2)
There's a difference between a single employee of a large company and the official position from Sun.
JWZ rants about everything. About all you can prove with a link to JWZ.org is that you've found someone with an opinion on everything.
Re:Not Cross-Platform? (Score:2)
The implementation of Java on Netscape when it came out was so slow and broken it was ridiculous. The appletviewer or HotJava ran programs faster than Netscape did.
Re:Cross platform (Score:2)
I'm not trying to be a wise ass, but i remember seeing perl work on windows before java. But that's my memory.
Re:Cross platform (Score:1)
Nothing new here, move along.
-uso.
Re:Cross platform (Score:2, Informative)
Sure they did add features, but you were quite free not to use them, or to use them and say 'my app only runs on windows'. Frankly, what's the problem there, you could write your app using JNI to integrate with some Windows-only component. It wouldn't be cross-platform anymore but would be still compliant.
If Sun had actually sent Java off to become a standard, instead of pretending to, and MS
Re:Cross platform (Score:1)
I think that "If Sun would just standardize java" agrument is horse s__t. The second they did that MS would be in there trying to bastardize the standard. After all, they signed a contract that said they would maintain the (Sun's published) standard, and then went and ignored it. So you think that they would not try to use a standard committee to their advantage and everyone else's d
Re:Cross platform (Score:1)
I think Sun thought they were striking a blow against MS, but just shot themselves in the foot.
Standards mean that there exists a minimum that is guaranteed to work. If a vendor wants to extend it, fine (some ex
This is a civil suit, not a technical suit. (Score:3, Insightful)
-Brent
uhm (Score:4, Interesting)
When was the last time anything was settled on technical merits and thereby gained widespread adoption? Zealots from both sides usually state their case and fanatically defend their position while the rest of us pick what we feel more comfortable with. Unbiased technical merit rarely gets attention, and even more rare is that it is the deciding factor when faced with a choice.
wouldn't this story have been more useful on thurs (Score:1)
Re:wouldn't this story have been more useful on th (Score:2)
Re:wouldn't this story have been more useful on th (Score:2)
Oops, not the ruling - the oral arguments! The ruling will come at a later date.
Predictions (Score:1)
Re:Predictions (Score:1)
Define "Technical" (Score:3, Interesting)
Too bad it's not being settled on the technical merits of both products."
Certainly there's money involved in the decision or else it wouldn't be in the courts.
But even a "technical" evaluation for complex software products involves many aspects which are subjective and depend on the users.
Exhibit A: Is Perl or Python better? The answer depends on the application and the reviewer. Likewise "Tastes great. Less filling."
Re:Define "Technical" (Score:2, Insightful)
A funny detail (Score:3, Interesting)
XP was shipped, and Microsoft decided to fulfill its promise much earlier.
Sun got mad.
Java VM (Score:1)
Re:Java VM (Score:1)
Re:Java VM (Score:2)
Re:Java VM (Score:1)