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IBM Releases Fastest SDK For Java 6

IndioMan writes "IBM is releasing an SDK for Java 6 and is sponsoring an Early Release Program to gather feedback from the Java community. Product binaries and documentation are available for Linux on x86 and 64-bit AMD, and AIX for PPC for 32- and 64-bit systems. In addition to supporting the Java SE 6 Platform specification, IBM's SDK also focuses on platform stability, performance, and diagnostics. It's tops on every benchmark."

4 of 117 comments (clear)

  1. What benchmarks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It would be nice to see a few links uphold that claim.

  2. Re:The Fastest JDK? by thule · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know the statement was tagged as funny, but Java is quite fast these days. Java7 will only get faster with some really spiffy JVM ideas. I don't see Python, Perl, and Ruby catching up for a while.

    It seems to me that once Java is opened up and is included with every Linux distro out there, Java will not be perceived as large and slow anymore. It will be a simple apt-get, yum, etc away. It will just work.

  3. Re:The Fastest JDK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hasn't been funny or true for a long time...

    I think you're wrong. Even today, over 15 years since Java was first announced, we see little use of it for client-side development. There are only a handful of consumer-grade applications written in Java, with the most popular being Azureus and RSSOwl. Even then, one of the chief complaints against them is their lack of responsiveness and their excessive memory consumption. And keep in mind that they use SWT for their GUIs, which is in fact far lighter and more responsive than Swing. But compared to purely native applications, they're still noticeably slower.

    We really don't see Java applets used much any more. Flash has taken over.

    The only reason Java has obtained some level of success for enterprise-grade applications is because most large corporations can afford to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on expensive, high-end Sun and IBM hardware. Those are the sort of systems one needs in order to make Java truly useful.

    It's in the best interest of the Java community for us to admit that Java is indeed quite slow. Only after we have admitted this fact will we truly be able to improve the situation.

  4. Re:The Fastest JDK? by kv9 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because this is slashdot, and perl is one of the Chosen Few Languages, along with C, Ruby, Python and PHP. Java, being both closed (for the moment) and slow (5 years ago on the client side) is not.

    I believe you mean "Chosen-Few-Languages-for-Slamming". they all get it from the slashcrowd, in no particular order:

    • Java - slow, bloaty
    • C - old and krusty, pointers baaaad, get with the times
    • Ruby - it's the new Visual Basic
    • Python - haha whitespace
    • PHP - insecure, noobs
    • Perl - gruesome syntax and readability