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James Gosling Leaves Google

scottbomb writes "Well, that didn't take long: 'After only a few months at Google, Java founder James Gosling has left the search engine giant to go to a small startup company specializing in ocean-based robotics.' In a brief blog post about his new company, Gosling says, 'They have a growing fleet of autonomous vehicles that roves the ocean collecting data from a variety of onboard sensors and uploading it to the cloud. The robots have a pile of satellite uplink/GSM/WiMax communication gear and redundant GPS units. They have a bunch of deployments. For example, one is a set of robots patrolling the ocean around the Macondo well in the Gulf of Mexico monitoring water chemistry. These craft harvest energy from the waves for propulsion and can stay at sea for a very long time. The longest that one craft has been out is 2.5(ish) years. They can cross oceans.... Slowly. They only move at 1-2 knots, which is a great speed for data collection.'"

3 of 192 comments (clear)

  1. ... just like Java by ccr · · Score: 5, Funny

    The first thing that popped out as I glanced through the post was:

    "They can cross oceans.... Slowly. They only move at 1-2 knots, which is a great speed for data collection."

    And I thought to myself, "slowly? .. well, it's father of Java, after all."

  2. Re:What do you wanna bet... by martin-boundary · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I doubt it. If you read Gosling interviews from the past few years, one of the ideas he likes to talk about a lot over and over is embedding millions of sensors into the world - in roads, walls, etc. Tiny little bugs that measure something, which can be combined into a completely novel picture of the world.

    That's not really what Google does, they're an advertising company whose primary inputs are words and human behaviours.

    The first is closer to hands on lab work, while the second is pure data munging, and my impression is Gosling's not that interested in the latter.

  3. Re:SkyNet by binarylarry · · Score: 5, Informative

    PermGen is gone in newer versions of Java.

    --
    Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!