To: Dominic Harr
IBM, HP, Oracle, and literally a thousand other companies make that very unlikely.
The Java Community Process doesn't own Java, Harr. You know that (or should, at any rate). Sun retains all rights to Java. That means if Sun tanks, it takes Java down with it because another company could buy the rights to Java and start charging royalties. Then you'd be royally screwed.
In fact, there are many of us that wish Sun would either drop the hardware focus or just spin off the Java division into it's own independent group.
A rare moment: We actually agree on this point. I consider it to be a strategic mistake for Sun to not release Java to ISO or ECMA.
Besides, I'm a developer -- I will just move to the next technology. Could even be .NET, as you already know, I'm working with C# also. I'm technology agnostic. Ironically enough, I'm exactly the type of developer that .NET is going to have to win over if it expects to survive. I would *never* lock myself into a single vendor, like you have.
I think you'll get a chance to be flexible at the rate things are going for Sun.
I have skills, so I don't have to.
I could be mean and say that janitorial skills are a dime a dozen. But I won't. Oops, I already did.
80 posted on
06/03/2002 10:08:32 PM PDT by
Bush2000
To: Bush2000
The Java Community Process doesn't own Java, Harr. What you don't understand is a lot.
And since I know you've been explained the truth about the JCP by several people, your lack of understanding is clearly cultivated.
Oh well, you know what they say: "It ain't done til Lotus won't run".
Aren't you proud of your Brittney?
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson