Sun's Java Will Be Free This Year
Ian Whyde notes that Sun is finally coming to the end of its struggle to open up Java completely. Simon Phipps, the chief open source officer at Sun Microsystems, said: "There were a couple of holdouts there. One was the area to do with raster graphics and 2D graphics. That turned out to be owned by a company that didn't want us to release that code as open source. We negotiated with them and because they've said 'yes, you can open source the code'... The only element that's left now is actually a sound-related component within Java. We finally decided that the vendor that's involved there just isn't going to play ball and we're rewriting the code from scratch. That's going to be done within the next couple of months." In another sense the milestone of a free Java was reached this week when IcedTea passed the rigorous Java Test Compatibility Kit.
Why don't they just optimize the needed lines from IcedTea and glue them to their licensed code?
isn't that supposed to be the way OSS benefits the community?
- Human knowledge belongs to the world
Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
... people recognize the scale and generosity of what Sun have done in GPL'ing their crown jewel.
${YEAR+1} is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop!
Multiple, parallel versions splits development efforts. It also splits QA efforts, and makes support for both versions problematic. It's usually much safer to have a primary release and branches to test new features, rather than being forced to rewrite from scratch. I give good credit to Sun for doing this: it's one of the missing Java support components for the open source world, and should allow inclusion of actual Java in distributions such as Fedora and Mandriva, saving us serious pain maintaining multiple, slightly conflicting versions in different locations for different packages. And it should make OpenOffice installations much smaller and more efficient.
Yes , bad mouthing a company without knowing anything about it, that's the way we can get companies to be more OSS friendly. Way to go.
for the last time people, I am "frodo from middle eaRTH", not "middle eaST".
Yes of course Java will be declared obsolete this year. As one of the top most in demand tech skill on the planet all the usuers are furiously swapping to make sure they convert to product Y by the end of the year and abandon the last ten years of development. (try typing in the word Java to a job search engine, then type in your favorite skill de jour)
Once again, I thank SUN for all efforts in this direction. My request to other OSS evangelists is to let existing Open source implementations of Java die so that efforts can be spent on this SUN implementation alone. The availability of multiple implementations of the same idea is not getting us very far so far. I hope we have learned from this.
Sun's stock is likely to be free this year, too. As if being 95% off its 2001 price back in 2007, Jonothan Schwartz's brilliant renaming of the ticket and 4:1 reverse split has accomlished an almost 60% loss of value in the last eight months.
With this idiot at the helm and the board which obviously could not care less what happens at Sun, I wouldn't doubt if the current price ($2.85 in pre-reverse-split prices) drops another 50% by 2009.
Applets? Do you think that's what Java is used for these days? Have you been in hibernation, or serving time?
Your head a splode
So servers using more than ~3.whatever GB of RAM is a "small subset" of what Java is used for?
And in five years time, you will feel the same way?
Unless the sysadmins are loading up sites using Java applets on those servers, there won't be a problem.
If you are a consultancy relying heavily on a given piece of software and it brakes or you need enhancements, who are you going to ask to do the work for you?
Maybe people working independently in FOSS projects do not know how to market themselves as gurus of a given project, but this does not mean some people actually doing the programming will not benefit.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.