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Java Programming

Trouble Ahead for Java 772

Jeremy Geelan writes "The editor-in-chief of the world's largest journal devoted to Java wonders whether, with the arrival of Microsoft's C# programming language on the scene, Java perhaps has only 5 years or so left to live. Javaland has erupted! This is a little like Bill Gates wondering out loud whether to send Scott McNealy a Christmas card. But is Alan Williamson right? Read this short article and decide for yourself."
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Trouble Ahead for Java

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  • Printable Version (Score:4, Informative)

    by The Slashdolt ( 518657 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @04:54PM (#3331640) Homepage
    All pages on one page here [sys-con.com]
  • Not likely :) (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Desmoden ( 221564 )

    Java is popular because the programmers like it. Java may or may not be long for this world, but I can guarentee you that C# is not going to be what pushes it off the hill.

    It's really a funny idea :)

    Des
    • Re:Not likely :) (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Telastyn ( 206146 )
      One comment he made that was of particular interest to me:

      C# is the new building block for Windows applications, the next VB!


      The actual concept of VB script isn't bad. A scripting language that can access nearly every application on an OS with minimal effort. IMO this has always been a weak point for windows, and a great strength for *nix.

      Until recently VB was fairly shakey in when and if it would work. Furthermore not many power users knew about it. Furthermore those that did knew it sucked nuts. Plus it only works on windows....

      Now. Replace that with a C derivative (granted, a long derivation) that could script word docs, and outlook calendars, user info, and databases seamlessly and interchangably from any client OS.

      That would be a good thing (for windows, and for windows admins). It would help entrench windows in the corperate world, and boost one of it's weaknesses. Furthermore it could be something that PHB's would see as 'the next big thing'.

      I could see C# pushing java off the hill if Microsoft includes it in everything *and* if it doesn't suck like Visual Basic *and* if it ran with (all, or practically all) of the functionality on non-ms OSes.

      • Now. Replace that with a C derivative (granted, a long derivation) that could script word docs, and outlook calendars, user info, and databases seamlessly and interchangably from any client OS.
        Sounds like a fantastic virus toolkit. :-)
  • $10 prize (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    for the person who can write the best "Java is Dying" troll.
  • Control Freaks (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Malc ( 1751 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @04:59PM (#3331673)
    Perhaps it's time that Sun stopped being such control freaks. IMHO, they've been the biggest problem with Java. They're at a severe disadvantage on the client now that MSFT no longer ship it with the OS, but will have the .Net runtime... most people don't want to download and install Sun's JRE.
  • This is a Good Thing (Score:5, Interesting)

    by atrowe ( 209484 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:00PM (#3331693)
    I, for one, welcome the oncoming of Microsoft's C# language. A little bit of competition can only help the market. When I first started programming in Java eight years ago, the industry was far different than today. Java was, for the most part, an open standard, and one was free to do with it as one pleased. Now that Java is the biggest player in the industry, it seems Sun has gotten a bit greedy, and is trying to cash in on Java's popularity.

    Microsoft's C# entry will only cause more competition in the market, and the consumers and programmers are the ones who will benefit. I'd love to see Sun loosen some of their restrictive Java liscensing practices in response to C#, and I think that is just what will happen. Open source wins the day yet again.

    • by Hard_Code ( 49548 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:15PM (#3331840)
      "cash in on Java's popularity."

      HUH? Sun has put a TON of resources into Java, gives it away freely ("costless"), provides *extensive* docs, and even lets you look at the full source. Java is an immense and diverse platform. Sun sells hardly *any* Java-based products (the only thing that comes to mind is the HotJava Bean which has been discontinued, and Forte, which there is already a free edition!)

      Sun has no "services" they are trying to shove on people. They define everything as open specs, and then simply create a reference implementation that you can *choose* to use - next to being fully open source (and they've been making strides trying to be more open), there really isn't much *more* they could do for developers. I'm actually surprised that Sun is devoting this much energy to Java when there isn't much profit to be made from it, but it sure is great.

      I don't see C# having anywhere near the community that Java has. Typically Microsoft communities are people who have comradery in being serfs. It's a lot different with Java.
      • by jpatokal ( 96361 ) on Saturday April 13, 2002 @04:42AM (#3333984) Homepage
        Sun sells hardly *any* Java-based products (the only thing that comes to mind is the HotJava Bean which has been discontinued, and Forte, which there is already a free edition!)

        Maybe you should take a peek into the corporate world. Want to add SNMP functionality to your Java product? J. Random Hacker doesn't, but Q. Big Corporation often will, and the only way to do this is to fork out the moolah for Sun's JDMK [sun.com]. The cost? $10000 for one (1) developer seat and 50 runtime licenses [sun.com].

        But Sun's basic strategy is to popularize Java (at a loss) and then sell Sun hardware for it (at a profit). The company I work for is almost entirely a Java shop. We make carrier-grade applications, and whenever possible we ask our customers to use Sun hardware, because that's what Java works best on. This is not a coincidence.

        Cheers,
        -j.

    • by garett_spencley ( 193892 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:25PM (#3331901) Journal
      Same here.

      I really don't like MS more than anyone else but my limited knowledge of c# vs. java really seems to tell me that java programmers who decide for whatever reason to give c# an honest shot are going to love it.

      I really like Java as a language but I never use it because it gives me no practical advanatage. I'm quite willing to spend lots of resources porting my c/c++ code to a million different platforms and testing it on those platforms if it means it's going to be really fast and my user's won't have to worry about installing and configuring Java and then having a program that runs slow as tar.

      I'm really starting to hate Sun lately actually. I don't see them as any better than MS. They're just a big corporation trying to make their big cheif richer than he already is.

      Java is an excellent language but since the actually design Sun has yet to produce anything of value.

      They haven't done anything to help open source or any communities. They announced that Solaris was going to be open source (big deal. It's widely used but I don't know anyone who actually likes it). But they dropped that plan anyway.

      They sure seem to be making good use of gnome but AFAIK they haven't made any contributions to the code (please correct me if I'm wrong).

      And as you stated Java is getting more and more proprietary.

      What we need is an open language that matches up to java and c#. Something free of patents and IP.

      So hopefully MS will cause Sun to smarten up and loosen up Java a little. Then we may actually be able to see what it's really capable of.

      --
      Garett
    • Now that Java is the biggest player in the industry, it seems Sun has gotten a bit greedy, and is trying to cash in on Java's popularity.

      I'd like to know how much time and millions of dollars Sun has spent developing this free language, with a wonderful API, and plenty of source code available, before I start calling them "greedy."

      If anyone's greedy here in this context, I sure as hell don't think it's Sun. Shit, they could make Java proprietary today, closing off all source access, requiring people to buy the JDK, etc... and it would still be popular, and you'd still have all their current and older Java-related stuff available for free.
  • by Lucky Kevin ( 305138 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:03PM (#3331718) Homepage
    There are so many Java programmers and so much Java code being produced that it will last a lot longer than five years. People still need Cobol programmers, ok so not mainstream but look how long ago that was designed and despite being crappy it is still here.

    But as the article says it really doesn't help when people who should know better say "Java? No one is doing that now. Microsoft is no longer supporting it."

    Gates has a lot to answer for.
    • by happyclam ( 564118 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:17PM (#3331849)
      There are so many Java programmers and so much Java code being produced...

      Produced? Yes... supported? Maybe... I wonder what percentage of the Java code written in the last five years died with the series of dot com failures we've witnessed.

      That said, of course you're correct: COBOL is still in use, and Java will last much longer than five years.

      But the language of choice may be something else in five years. Java hasn't been around that long, and scads of people were saying it would never overtake C or C++ when it was first released. And really, C hadn't been around that long when Java was first introduced.

    • I hear Cobol programmers get paid fairly well these days. Why? Because there aren't that many of them. While I certainly do not believe Java will be killed off by C#, I do see the author making an good point.

      He asks if Java is "here to stay." In the sense of whether it will remain dominant in the coming years, maybe. Maybe not.
  • by fireboy1919 ( 257783 ) <rustyp AT freeshell DOT org> on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:04PM (#3331725) Homepage Journal
    So...a language whose major strength is portability is going to lose to a language written by a company whose major weakness is not allowing other platforms to use its standards?

    Forget the fact that there's a Linux movement to port it, I don't trust the company behind the product - they'll add new features to the JVM and break with all the other JVMs. And I don't think that anyone who actually wants portability thinks that Microsoft is committed to portability.

    I won't trust Microsoft until they've had five years or so of good behavior, and they haven't had one yet. Based on this, products that require portability - such as .net and C# - are not going to be very attractive to programmers. Personally, I'm of the mind that "write once, compile anywhere" is a good philosophy, so I don't really care what language its in, as long as its got a GCC front end that works perfectly.
    • So...a language whose major strength is portability is going to lose to a language written by a company whose major weakness is not allowing other platforms to use its standards?

      Normally I'd agree with you but considering that some of us at MSFT get along with the Mono folks [kuro5hin.org] and that MSFT has released a version of the CLI that runs on FreeBSD and Windows [kuro5hin.org] with source. I'm not sure your claim is valid.

      Disclaimer: This post reflects my opinions only and does not reflect the intentions, opinions, strategies or plans of my employer.
      • I'm not surprised that folks at MSFT get along with Mono, since they have been major cheerleaders for .Net. When you can run Visual Studio.Net on Mono (or anything else) on a non-MS operating system, you can claim portability. Until then, I will persist in thinking that Microsoft will keep important portions of .Net tied to their operating system.
      • So you are claiming (just like the author of the original article) that the CLR will be widely available even though so far it has been ported to exactly one other platform? This seems like a stretch. I'll believe in CLR portability when I see implementations for Solaris and PalmOS, and other platforms that Microsoft directly competes with.

        The problem here is that since Microsoft makes both platforms and applications they have no incentive to make their apps work on other platforms. It is nearly impossible to trust them to support other platforms because it actually isn't in their best interest. Why would they want to reduce dependency on some of their biggest selling products?
      • by schmaltz ( 70977 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @06:57PM (#3332421)
        I'd view this as temporary, because this is classic Microsoft bait-and-switch. Three-card monty newbies can be expected to lose $20 because they're rubes, first time. But we've lived with Microsoft for >20 years, and Bill's tactics are known.

        Knowing this well-earned reputation, for luring then abandoning Java developers, for sullying the Java marketplace [com.com], I'm going to wait a bit before getting next to seahash and dotnet, especially in the Unix context.

        Why should Microsoft treat Unix developers to concurrent, product-lifetime updates of dotnet when its stated goal is the decimation of Unix? (y'know, NOISE? Netscape, Oracle, IBM, Sun and Everybody else.)

        BSD is no different than Linux from M$FT's perspective. With that, I'm taking bets from all comers: I'll pay 3-to-1 that Microsoft abandons all its Unix implementations within two years, 4-to-1 that it develops a strategy which breaks compatibility with non-Windows dotnet implementations.
    • by fatboy ( 6851 )
      So...a language whose major strength is portability is going to lose to a language written by a company whose major weakness is not allowing other platforms to use its standards?

      I think that the way M$ has been able to beat everyone is to get people to play their game. Take OS/2.It was not a better "Windows" than "Windows" when Microsoft changed their API. They will do the same thing to C#. Guess where all those C# based platforms are going to be moving to? They will move over to a platform that "supports real C#".

      This is why Linux/BSDs have done so well, they refuse to be "gamed" by Microsoft.
    • by Locutus ( 9039 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @06:29PM (#3332271)
      No you shouldn't trust them. It stunned my when Sun licensed Java to Microsoft because of the history Microsoft had then with regard to stealing technology and breaking licensing agreement. For some reason these Corporate idiots keep thinking Microsoft will change or THEY can stop them.

      You can't stop a bulldozer with a pitchfork and you can't stop a monopoly with a piece of paper/license.

      By the way, there is patented material in those .Nyet specs so mark my word, there'll be some lawyers with paper clubs going after the opensource crowd if it tried to run with .Nyet.

      The standards org they released it to allows this.

      BE WARNED, MICROSOFT DOES NOT DO ANYTHING FOR THE GOOD OF DEVELOPERS OR BUSINESS. IT DOES IT TO PROTECT IS MONOPOLY.

      LoB
  • by Misha ( 21355 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:05PM (#3331730) Homepage
    haven't they said something like this before?

    the problem with C++ was that exactly zero of code was reused, even though it was supposed to be made simpler. Java code actually reuses itself pretty darn well, and last I checked J2EE library just keeps growing and growing, and largely its success is in that.

    as for C#, i doubt anyone except Microsoft is interested in seeing more packages of it. it becomes pointless to have non-object code in C# if you are planning to devise a framework for other people to work with.

    anyways, if Java only has five years life in it, why would you stake your life on C# of all things? wouldn't you expect that in five years people would be switching to something newer than the love-child of Java and Microsoft that didn't overtake its predecessor and hardly had any advantages except probably back-doors into the Windows kernel?

    just my two cents...
    • "the problem with C++ was that exactly zero of code was reused, "

      bull.
      I won't get into a JAVA/C++ debate, but please don't go off spouting crap like that, and try to understand that which you speak out against. You make yourself out to be a damn fool.

      A damn fool, is the worse kind.

  • ...it seems to me that Java has a lot going for it because of its versatility, like in embedded devices, as a web development platform and so on. I could be totally wrong here, but .NET and C# seem to be focused only on delivery of applications over a network -- not necessarily practical for many areas in which Java is currently used. Java also has a lot of heavyweights behind it *now* (IBM and Sun above all) and it is in widespread use *now*, giving it a lot more clout than .NET and C#, which are still essentially vaporware in comparison IMO.

    Cheers,

    Ethelred [grantham.de]

  • by nvrrobx ( 71970 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:06PM (#3331746) Homepage
    This article is really light on details, and frankly useless. It seems more like a call-to-arms for Java developers, but it certainly lacks the power of Mel Gibson's speech in Braveheart.

    It basically is saying that since Microsoft doesn't support Java, Java will die. I'd like to hope that's not the case. Java has some things .NET and C# do not - it's more mature, has a large developer base, and it's APIs and technologies are well thought out, spec'ed and documented.

    As an example, I just started working with JavaMail a few days ago. Within 20 minutes I was reading emails and sending them. Talk about productive! .NET doesn't have anything that comes close.

    The only thing for me that .NET has going for it is Visual Studio.NET. Like it or not, it's a great development environment, and one that most Windows developers are already familiar with.
    • .NET doesn't have anything that comes close.

      Careful, there. .NET is at least in part an integration technology for COM. That's quite a large body of components you are blithely dismissing.

      C//
  • Languages don't really die like that. Look at what happened with Y2K. There's too much invested already, especially in Java. Maybe Microsoft will be able to convince the kids in CS class that it's sexier to focus on C# and not Java. Maybe the number of Java hype magazines on the news stand will be cut in half. Maybe Java won't be as "cool" as it is today (maybe it will be) but it won't be dead.

    I'm amazed at the amount of OS/2 crap that I still see, and OS/2 has supposedly been dead for years.
  • I think you'll find even COBOL programs are still be developed commercially, so to say Java will be dead within 5 years is flamebait.

    With C# Microsoft have taken ideas from Java, but C# is isn't Java.

    C# is designed to kill of Visual J++, by migrating users to the .Net via C# but I doubt even Microsoft think it will usurp Java itself.

    Sure Microsoft are trying their best to stifle Java, thats because they feel threatened like some sort of wounded animal.

    Microsoft can't rely on Windows and Office anymore as being their core business longterm, hence their .Net stategy (with C# a small part of their plan)

    Java probaly will die eventually, but I'm sure it won't be C# that does it.

  • by CmdrTaco (editor) ( 564483 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:06PM (#3331754)
    Just in case it gets fully /.'ed:

    There May Be Trouble Ahead
    by Alan Williamson

    As Nat King Cole famously sang, we have to "face the music and dance..." This month's editorial is coming to you with a reader beware warning!

    I've been engaged in some great debates over the last month on a variety of topics, but the one that has caught my interest is the old chestnut regarding the longevity of Java. Is it here to stay? If not, how long do we have? Quite rightly, it's being talked about and I've had the good fortune to brush shoulders with a number of big names in our industry who have given me their perspectives on the whole debate. I have my own feelings about where Java is headed and I do believe that if, as a community, we don't get our act together, we may have only five years left at the most. After talking to my counterparts, it would appear I'm being overly generous with five years.

    What's happening? Well, it's our old friend C# and its relentless march toward the development community. Setting aside the old argument that due to Microsoft's dominance it may well win the day, it's interesting to look at other reasons why C# may win the battle. Let's blow away some misconceptions that you may or may not be aware of regarding this new kid.

    Myth #1: C# is a Windows-only technology.
    You could be excused for believing that, but did you know there's a major movement in the open source world to port the CLR (Common Language Runtime, i.e., their JVM!) to operating systems other than MS Windows? Linux, to name one. Imagine for a moment being able to run your .NET services alongside Apache on a Redhat box, seamlessly integrating into the rest of the network. This alone would be a major blow to server-side Java. It's also a subtle way for Microsoft to unofficially support the growing number of Linux seats without losing face (read www.halcyonsoft.com/news/iNET_PR.asp [halcyonsoft.com]).

    Myth #2: C# is an inferior Java clone.
    This is the most dangerous one and the one you probably tell yourself in order to keep the scales tipped in Java's favor. The truth is, it's not an inferior clone; it's a different clone, with many arguing that the differences are minute to the majority of the developer community. It will be frighteningly easy for Java developers to move over to C# with no real headaches to contend with. I suspect this was always on Microsoft's mind when developing the language (read www.prism.gatech.edu/~gte855q/CsharpVsJava.html [gatech.edu]).

    Myth #3: C# is for developing Web services only.
    Most definitely not, and I have heard this one retorted back to me on a number of occasions. Ironically, this is the one area that could really hurt Java Ð on the client. As you know, Java has not made any significant headway in this space due mainly to its awfully slow Swing implementation. While the recent release of JDK1.4 has brought significant performance gains, it's still nowhere near the speed of its native Windows applications with respect to fast, snappy responses (although it must be said, the speed of a Swing application on a Mac OS-X does show what could be achieved). C# is the new building block for Windows applications, the next VB! And we know how many applications popped up when VB hit the market (read www.c-sharpcorner.com/WinForms.asp [c-sharpcorner.com]).

    Okay, how many of you think I've abandoned all hope for Java and have gone to the dark side? I suspect some of you are questioning my loyalties at this precise moment, wondering if I'm fit to occupy my role as EIC. Well, don't panic, I'm merely being a realist and looking at it from all angles. You'd be the first ones to complain if I buried my head in the sand and just ignored the threat. We have to look at this together and come up with a strategy that will enable us to effectively take on C#. We'll be getting a lot of heat from all over and we need to be armed with the information and prepared to go back to the drawing board and reeducate the masses. Sadly, they are being led a merry dance by Pied Piper Gates.

    Allow me to cite you an example of such blind ignorance and if this doesn't scare you, then I don't know what will. I was recently involved with the Scottish government, discussing technology and what have you, where naturally the topic of Microsoft was high on the agenda. Excusing the fact that these people took a certain pride in believing they knew what was going on and loved name-dropping, the phrase that caught me off guard was the following: "Java? No one is doing that now. Microsoft is no longer supporting it."

    Wow! Talk about a major miscommunication. And this from someone who controls budgets for the technology sector in Scotland. Ironically, I believe he really thinks he has his finger on the pulse of technology. It's sheer ignorance like this that scares me the most. Microsoft has successfully planted and nurtured the seed in people's heads that just because it isn't supporting Java in Windows XP, Java is dead. I have to admit I was taken aback and quite flabbergasted when I heard that retort. I really didn't know where to go with that. So much background information was obviously missing that I wasn't too sure if I would come over as patronizing and whether, ultimately, they would understand.

    Sadly, this is not an isolated incident. Ever since I started writing about this topic in my editorials, I've been hearing stories from you regarding similar misconceptions and it scares me. We have a beautiful language here in Java; it has achieved industry-wide support and is pushing forward with great velocity. What can we do to support it?

    You do realize we need an anthem. All great causes have an anthem. Something for us to get behind and sing!!! Suggestions gratefully received. We need a Java song!

    Until next month...

    Author Bio
    Alan Williamson is editor-in-chief of Java Developer's Journal. During the day he holds the post of chief technical officer at n-ary (consulting) Ltd, one of the first companies in the UK to specialize in Java at the server side. Rumor has it he welcomes all suggestions and comments.

  • It seems like we here this a lot. Now that we have language X, no one will program in language Y anymore. Time after time, this proves to be incorrect. There are many reasons to stay with an old language, even if a better one has come along. This includes finding programmers who have the requisite years of experience, the added development cost of doing multi-language development, programmer preference, etc.

    C# will definitely become a major player in the field. Both due to the fact that it is a well reasonably well designed language (Anders Hejlsberg did a good job) and that Microsoft is going to put its weight behind it. But just because C# becomes big, doesn't mean that Java will disappear.

  • by bigmouth_strikes ( 224629 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:07PM (#3331762) Journal
    I think the author has several good points, especially in pointing out some key shortcomings of Java (java on the client, Swing). Also, the .NET toolkit looks very competent and building and deploying .asp's is quite simple as compared to deploying a java solution.

    But the key thing not mentioned is the fact that Big Blue and the rest of the industry is quite determined on Java. Sure, IBM and Microsoft [slashdot.org] are working together on Web Services, but I think IBM is unlikely to start supporting .NET instead of Java in their tools. More important, when IBM and MS are talking to each other and making standards for web services, it is more likely than not that both Java and C# will coexist.

    Java has shortcomings, but it has become a success despite this, and due to a vast support from professionals ranging from programmers to computer scientists. To say that all this will be gone in 5 years is more than bold, when in fact the amount of existing Java code are probably more than can be replaced in 5 years.

    Of course, languages and platforms come and go, but since C# doesn't drastically change the way application development is done - which is what Java did, in several ways - I don't think it'll start a revolution in the way that the article suggests.
  • Heck Yes! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by augustz ( 18082 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:07PM (#3331768)
    There are couple of key points that are interesting about this.

    C# really is a standard. Microsoft's decision to go the standards route really validates the competitive advantage true open standards generate.

    The HUGE question is if Microsoft will try and pull some patent / IP protection / royalty stunt with C#. We need to have some lawyer go over the C# license, standards doc, patent agreement to see if Microsoft has given up it's rights to sue for patent infrignment if people develop competing implementations.

    My feeling is that if it becomes clear that C# is a truely open standard, that it will be suprisingly succesfull. Despite what Java zealots like to claim, the underlying technology is good. And while I initially was a member of the Java lobby, their eternal harping on the "eventual" standardization of Java turned me off. Java is not an open standard, and for an underlying technology that every company can feel comfortable going with (including Microsoft) that fact is problamatic. And Sun has already pulled a couple of students with Java and royalties on the enterprise level etc. We're getting competing implementations already with go-mono.net for C#.

    The problem Microsoft faces is that they really need to totally convince folks (aka with binding legal agreements) that they are making this a real open standard and aren't going to pull a patent protection bogosity on anyone. They face in this case the facts of their history, which is horrible. I'm frankly concerned a bit less about the embrace and extend side of things, though it would be nice if they didn't pull stunts in that area either.

    Anyways, if Microsoft does it well, C# could really take off. The key is schools. Java is the it language now, and that matters more than people think. If you start with java you become familiar with Java IDE's, you become familiar with other Java projects, and when the time comes to whip up your first website you'll pick java which means when you deceide to make a big website, you'll probably choose Java as well. People will choose whats comfortable, not what is necessarily technically superior and the decisive moment for comfort is what you are forced to learn in high school and college.
  • XP quote and more (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mgkimsal2 ( 200677 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:08PM (#3331775) Homepage
    "Microsoft has successfully planted and nurtured the seed in people's heads that just because it isn't supporting Java in Windows XP, Java is dead"

    I don't think MS had much to do with it. Sun and a seemingly large segment of the Java community and many industry pundits made a big stink about XP not including Java. I don't recall MS saying much one way or the other except saying you could download a JVM from their site. The Java community themselves planted this seed of doubt.

    "As you know, Java has not made any significant headway in this space due mainly to its awfully slow Swing implementation. While the recent release of JDK1.4 has brought significant performance gains, it's still nowhere near the speed of its native Windows applications with respect to fast, snappy responses"

    I'm not going to say Sun should open source Java, but for heaven's sake, make a GUI toolkit that doesn't suck. You can't cite Java's 'newness' as an excuse anymore.

    However little you think of VB (especially VBScript) MS has provided a huge number of tools to make development easy and painless - and the results are often decent. I remember being able to put together *simple* VB data collection forms back in 94-95 without having too much idea what the hell I was actually doing. There STILL nothing like that for Java. - Go ahead, flame away. I'm not a hardcore Java guy, but someone else here at the office is, and we constantly see shortcomings. That's not to say there's not strengths too, but still shortcomings. Open sourcing Java *MIGHT* help overcome many of those shortcomings (especially in the GUI toolkit area).

    I keep repeating this on various boards - if Sun was serious about getting Java to the masses, they'd carpet bomb the hell out of the US with CDs ala AOL with the latest JVM for multiple platforms. That they DON'T do this speaks volumes. Better yet - get AOL to bundle it on their CDs and have an installer with lots of nice Java packages - an 'intro to Java' for the common man. Explain the cross-platform benefits, etc. - something my mom could understand.
    • IBM has done a LOT more for Java GUIs than Sun ever has IMO.

      I installed the latest version of Eclipse [eclipse.org] and I was amazed at how fast the GUI ran. It is the first Java application that I've ran that didn't frustrate the hell out of me by running slowly. Sun should incorporate whatever GUI widgets IBM made into the next JDK.
      • by tdrury ( 49462 )
        Eclipse is built on SWT. You can get all the source and the API that eclipse is built with. SWT is a very thin layer (one-to-one by design) to the underlying windowing toolkit. So far, Win32, Motif, and gtk are supported although I had some problems with the gtk one. Qt is sadly missing, but I suspect once SWT catches people attention, a Qt binding will be created.

        Try SWT, it run circles around AWT/Swing. Sure it breaks platform independence to a degree; you'll have to distribute the appropriate dll/so along with your app, but who cares? That is a very small price to pay for a good java GUI.

        API javadoc [eclipse.org]

        -tim
    • I'm not going to say Sun should open source Java, but for heaven's sake, make a GUI toolkit that doesn't suck. You can't cite Java's 'newness' as an excuse anymore.

      I love hearing this argument. Yeah Java's AWT is somewhat heavyweight. But it is old, it's been around since JDK 1.0. JDK 1.2 Swing still has a ways to go but has made some significant improvements. However the problem that people neglect is that these Windowing toolkits are cross platform. I guarantee that my Java applications will out perform your VB, with the exception on Win32, on every other platform. Java gives people choice of where you can run those applications.

      However with the advent of .NET and J2EE becoming a larger API, it really isn't going to be about windowing anymore. It's all about Web Services. What can you do networking. Programming VB Data Collection forms will still be important, but soon you will see more and more drag and drop collections similar to VB with Java IDE's. That is once Sun really starts standardizing reusable JavaBeans.
      • As you know, Java has not made any significant headway in this space due mainly to its awfully slow Swing implementation. While the recent release of JDK1.4 has brought significant performance gains, it's still nowhere near the speed of its native Windows applications with respect to fast, snappy responses

        That's right - when you can't compete, leave the arena.

        I'd guarantee my QT app (or wxwindows, or even GTK) would run circles around your Java Swing app and run on multiple platforms.

        soon you will see more

        OK - "soon". I was thinking 2 years ago when I heard 'soon' back then too. JAVA IS NOT NEW. Sun needs to have delivered stuff years ago. They can't get out of promise mode. The guy below was right - IBM has done more for Java than Sun *ever* has, except for write API definitions.
    • by adubey ( 82183 )
      I keep repeating this on various boards - if Sun was serious about getting Java to the masses, they'd carpet bomb the hell out of the US with CDs ala AOL with the latest JVM for multiple platforms. That they DON'T do this speaks volumes

      Actually, AOL spent billions of dollars shipping out the CD's, and they had a way to quickly make money off them: charge $x for dial-up access.

      Sun could spend billions of dollars shipping out Java CD's, but how will they make money from this platform? There are three ways: 1) make money from licensing the platform implementation (i.e. like a Windows license fee) 2) make money from add-on software (i.e. like Office over windows) 3) make money from hardware.

      The thing is, they can't make money from #1 they've already licensed JVM's for dirt cheap. Spending billions won't give them any real advantage over IBM or Dell on #3. That is one reason why Sun is losing marketshare to both.

      Then there is #2. But this doesn't make sense unless Sun already has software that people are willing to spend money on.

      And since their blitz campaign will cost billions, they better have software that people will spend billions on.

      They just don't have this. That's why they don't blitz.
    • Sun doesn't have to Open Source Java for alternate GUIs to become available...There are already various 3rd party toolkits, such as IBM's SWT that either use native widgets or run in pure Java (which for obvious reasons tends to be slower)...

      The problem is its hard to get people to adopt these other toolkits with Sun standing firmly behind Swing, which as the article mentioned is almost so slow as to be unusable on every Java implementation except the OS X one.

      • Re:XP quote and more (Score:3, Informative)

        by alext ( 29323 )
        This is an exaggeration. Thousands of developers use JBuilder all day, and that is built on Swing. I switched to Eclipse, which uses SWT, and noticed no difference in GUI performance at all - they're both perfectly OK.
    • However little you think of VB (especially VBScript) MS has provided a huge number of tools to make development easy and painless - and the results are often decent. I remember being able to put together *simple* VB data collection forms back in 94-95 without having too much idea what the hell I was actually doing. There STILL nothing like that for Java. - Go ahead, flame away. I'm not a hardcore Java guy, but someone else here at the office is, and we constantly see shortcomings. That's not to say there's not strengths too, but still shortcomings. Open sourcing Java *MIGHT* help overcome many of those shortcomings (especially in the GUI toolkit area).

      Yeah, as a result VB is the number one favorite coding vehicle for worm and virus writers. Great recommendation BTW. WHen is VB gign to be open-soruce along with all the tied-in Windows APIs? (never of course). LOL

      I keep repeating this on various boards - if Sun was serious about getting Java to the masses, they'd carpet bomb the hell out of the US with CDs ala AOL with the latest JVM for multiple platforms. That they DON'T do this speaks volumes. Better yet - get AOL to bundle it on their CDs and have an installer with lots of nice Java packages - an 'intro to Java' for the common man. Explain the cross-platform benefits, etc. - something my mom could understand.

      Yeah right. That's how C, C++ and Lisp became popular huh? Lame.

      Anyone notice the rapid incrase of M$ supporters on /. now that M$ thinks Open Source and Linux is a threat? Apparently they are starting a "simulated" grass-roots campaign on /. I wonder how much these shills are getting paid? Based on their poor analogy, logic, and reasoning skills I hope not much. Ignorance and sophistry should not be lucrative.
    • I don't recall MS saying much one way or the other except saying you could download a JVM from their site. The Java community themselves planted this seed of doubt.

      Yeah, but the friggen Java download is 6 MB's! (So I've heard.) That's nothing for corporate users on broadband connections, but when you're trying to appeal to Joe Consumer surfing the web with his modem at home, with an attention span of maybe 20 seconds, he's not going to be patient enough to sit through a 30 minute download just so he can view your site. More than likely, he's gonna keep on surfing.

      If broadband had 80% saturation with consumers, then maybe it wouldn't be a big deal. But I'd bet large amounts of money that this is Micros~1's plan, to push Java into irrelevancy by making it difficult to use. They couldn't own it via their embrace and extend strategy, so they're attacking it by slieghting it.
  • Karma mirror (Score:3, Informative)

    by TheFlu ( 213162 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:09PM (#3331788) Homepage
    Looks like the site is starting to bog down, so here's a mirror [thelinuxpimp.com] if need be.
  • There is one good reason that Java will never go away, JAVA Rules!

    As a CS major, i've used quite a variety of programming languages. Among those, Java is by far the smoothest, easiest to understand and most elegant.

    C is outdated, C++ is the standard and is much more refined than C, but still has it's quirks and rough edges.

    Java offers very well documented classes and easy ways to do EVERYTHING. This alone makes Java superior, but also, Java enforces object orientation. While some people don't like this about a language(especially when you want to just write a 3 or 4 line mini-app), most people won't argue that once you have learned what classes, objects and methods are, OO makes things SO much easier to understand. It's a lot nicer way to think.

    C# will never replace Java, it's just too cool.

  • Myths #6, #7, #8 (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Pinball Wizard ( 161942 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:10PM (#3331804) Homepage Journal
    I don't buy it. Here's why.

    Myth #6. .Net will be accepted by users of non-Windows systems.


    Despite the hoopla over Mono, its not likely that .Net will succeed on systems outside of Microsoft's control. Two reasons for this - 1 Microsoft will make certain that .Net running anywhere other than Windows is crippled in some way and 2 - people who already don't use Windows have a distaste for Microsoft products, generally speaking.


    Myth #7 Java needs the desktop to succeed


    Not so. Java's greatest success to date has been on the server, powering servlets and .jsp's. It is the overwhelming choice among corporate users standardizing on a development platform. Another factor to consider. Java will win where UNIX and Linux servers are used. .Net will be used where Windows servers are used. IMO, the decisive factor between the .Net/Java battle will be what servers companies choose to buy. And anyone who wants a powerful, reliable server with good security built in is going Unix, unless they are trying to be cheap(Sorry. The truth hurts sometimes). Because Unix/Linux/IBM/Sun are winning where industrial strength servers are concerned, so too will Java win.


    Myth #8. .Net is better because it allows you to plug in multiple languages.


    Um, well yeah, as long as they are singly-inherited languages that don't have pointers and don't support any unique features, I guess that statement is true. Otherwise you are really looking at a bunch of languages whose features are the same and only differ by syntax(unless they don't support all of .Nets features, in which case they are even more crippled). Don't expect Perl to be able to do all its cool tricks under .net, and forget about languages like lisp and scheme.


    Java is five years ahead in this game, has widespread corporate acceptance, and the deciding factor is the server, where Microsoft is still way behind. If this is a horse race, my money is on Java.

    • Re:Myths #6, #7, #8 (Score:2, Informative)

      by M$ Mole ( 158889 )
      Myth #9 - .NET doesn't support pointers

      Try looking at the language spec for C# before you make comments like this. If you mark your code as unsafe, you can use all the pointers you like...you can create stack-arrays...just about anything you want.
  • C# is not only being pushed by Microsoft as a replacement for Java; C#.NET is the next-generation replacement for C++/MFC for Windows application development. Now, you can do native apps development, cross-platform applet development, and Internet client/server scripting, all using one language. Java, with its clunky VMs, could never offer that, and C# is (supposedly) the first language ever designed to do so.

    Microsoft benefits in two big ways: the hoards of Windows application developers will make the switch from Visual C++ to C#.NET, because of C#'s incredible versitility and cross-platform capabilities. Non-Windows developers (both C++ and Java) will start using C#, because it can do everything that C++ and Java could do, with the added bonus of being very Windows-friendly. Microsoft's third-party developer base expands. They gain further entry into the internet services world that they very much want to take over.

    Interestingly enough, as good as this is for Microsoft, C# and .NET may (perhaps) be a blessing in general to the world of computing by introducing the first *truly* write-once-run-anywhere development platform.

  • Java will outlive C# (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Glock27 ( 446276 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:13PM (#3331820)
    Java will outlive C# simply because C# is tied to Windows. Don't believe the hype about Mono - Mono is in it's infancy, while there are at least two high-quality commercial JREs for Linux and a rapidly improving open-source ahead-of-time Java compiler, gcj [gnu.org]. Mono faces an uphill legal battle to actually provide any signficant subset of .Net on Linux.

    One example of the author's cluelessness is that he touts the Halcyon solution - which is implemented in Java. This is supposed to show Java's vulnerability how?

    The rest of his "myths" are just as insightful..i.e. a bunch of crap. ;-)

    Where was SWT in this discussion for instance? Where was the discussion regarding millions of Java-enabled devices in the marketplace? Where was the discussion of Javas total dominance in application servers right now (perhaps .Net will make a dent, but it remains to be seen).

    Then the author gives forth with:

    "We have a beautiful language here in Java; it has achieved industry-wide support and is pushing forward with great velocity. What can we do to support it?"

    For a start, perhaps NOT writing clueless, FUD-filled articles that completely exaggerate the threat of C# to Java... Many, many Java users are going to be very slow to move to a Microsoft proprietary solution...and make no mistake about it, .Net is Microsoft proprietary. Only the C# language and the CLR runtime have been submitted to ECMA and those make up a tiny subset of .Nyet (sorry, couldn't resist doing that at least once!).

    • Where was SWT in this discussion for instance?
      Exactly. I've been playing with SWT for the last couple weeks and I've decided there is no need for AWT/Swing anymore and all the baggage those two carry. SWT is fast and is tightly coupled to the OS. I don't care that its not platform dependent. I can distribute my SWT app with the appropriate OS/window manager binding. SWT just needs work on the gtk binding and it needs a qt binding.

      Coupled with a native compiler like gcj or JET [excelsior-usa.com](free for personal use) and you have a winning combination. I pulled together a quick SWT app that was running IE inside of it (using SWT's Window binding which includes OLE) and compiled it native. It took about 12 lines of code to do this and it started up and ran very fast.

      -tim
  • I know that MS isn't including Java on XP by default (weasely, but hardly shocking). But can't the OEMs throw it on? Doesn't it just make sense to include JVM 1.3+ -- especially considering the rest of the stuff that makes it on yer average Dell/Gateway/Compaq? It's not like they don't know what hardware distro is appropriate.
  • Not a chance that Java will die in 5 years. The author is completely out of his mind. He cites some myths and things that for the most part well thought out an argued but this one get me to the most...

    Allow me to cite you an example of such blind ignorance and if this doesn't scare you, then I don't know what will. I was recently involved with the Scottish government, discussing technology and what have you, where naturally the topic of Microsoft was high on the agenda. Excusing the fact that these people took a certain pride in believing they knew what was going on and loved name-dropping, the phrase that caught me off guard was the following: "Java? No one is doing that now. Microsoft is no longer supporting it."

    The fact that some guy in government technology doesn't think that a language is being used doesn't mean a thing.

    Thats about the same thing as hearing somebody in a pro-ms shop tell me that apache is dead because it isn't supported by microsoft. It's total bull. There are some many markets out there for all different languages, and platforms...

    Java has so much going for it. From J2EE (EJB et al) all the way down to J2ME for embedded devices. Java is a very, very powerful language and the J2EE platform is very, very powerful.

    Not to mention support from Sun, IBM, HP, Rational, Intel etc... Java is huge. De-throwning something with the size and velocity of Java is not going to be an easy task. MS may have there way with the hoards of VB developers and the windows platform. But for Enterprise level development and integration (read: where the money is), Java is not going away anytime soon....

    -ryan
  • by PCM2 ( 4486 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:18PM (#3331851) Homepage
    It seems to me this kind of language fundamentalism is a relatively new thing in computer programming.

    C# is here, so Java will go away.
    Java is here, so C will go away.

    This has nothing to do with real programming, real programmers and how they behave. This is all hype generated by the marketing departments of corporations that are attempting to capture market share with proprietary languages.

    Myself, I've programmed in Basic, Pascal, Forth, C, Perl, PHP, Java, a couple flavors of assembly language ... etc. What? Am I done? No more languages, please, my brain is full? Give me a break.

    When I learned C back around 1987, it wasn't because Pascal was going to disappear off the face of the earth and I felt some kind of aching need to jump to the Next Big Thing. C was popular because it was a structured programming language that ran fast and offered much of the flexibility of machine code. I still like C ... but it hasn't stopped me from programming in any other, later languages! (Or earlier ones, for that matter.)

    I just do not understand this desire a lot of people seem to have to know that they're programming in the One True Language. WHY? Do they want to be sure they're wearing the right O'Reilly Conference T-shirt when they leave the house tomorrow morning, so they won't be laughed at by their peers?

    On the other hand, it does make some sense for the editor of a Java magazine to get fidgety when he hears about competitors to Java. It's his job, after all.
    • by MisterBlister ( 539957 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @06:05PM (#3332147) Homepage
      I just do not understand this desire a lot of people seem to have to know that they're programming in the One True Language. WHY? Do they want to be sure they're wearing the right O'Reilly Conference T-shirt when they leave the house tomorrow morning, so they won't be laughed at by their peers?

      Its just human nature, and not restricted to programming...I've seen tons of XBOX vs PS2 vs GameCube flamewars where people suggest those who dont buy the console they own are morons for half-baked reasons X, Y and Z...And that's just one example..the IBM/MAC debate was similar (when the Mac had enough marketshare that the debate made sense) as was the Amiga/Atari ST, C64/Apple II, etc... And its not even limited to computer users..Plenty, you see the same thing with car owners, audiophiles, etc...

      And of course then there's the mother of them all, religions. Its just human nature to draw lines of division and to label those 'not with us as against us'.

      • If you look at religions, though, the reason for labelling "those that aren't with us" as "agaisnt us" is because they ACTUALLY ARE. Any time you have a system that states it can be the only one, that is a hostile statement to any competing systems, and so it's only natural for the "fans" to start getting pissed at each other over it. It wouldn't be so bad if it wasn't for the fact that in some markets it really actually does work like that - the more other people choose a competing product, the more likely it is that you too will have to deal with it and use it instead of what you would have chosen if you had your druthers.
  • As a sideline observer, I have seen Java rise and CRASH. At more than 18 customer sites, Java was regarded as amateur. Java is a great cross platform language, but it never did fulfill it's promise of a THIN Solution to bandwidth problems.

    Our company spent Millions coding in Java, only to replace it with Native C 2 years later. Guess what? 55% increase in speed, 45% reduction in size, and before you knock the programmers, they're completely competant.

    I know of 2 companies who put their faith completely in Java, had a great product, but somehow corporations kept waiting and waiting til Java "matured" and these comanies both went bankrupt waiting.

    -YoGrark

    ==The opinions expressed in this opinion are not necessarily based on fact, are not necessarily reprentative of the poster==
  • by midh ( 33638 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:25PM (#3331898) Homepage
    I started learning Java during the great Java hype (1997). Then I went back to school to learn C. My initial impression was, why would anyone want to program in this unweildy language where your executables crash with weird errors like "Segmentation Fault" and "Core Dumped". I did not like all that pointer crap and the fact that you hade to declare your variables before you did anything else.

    Four years of college and several programming languages later Java is still my best girl. But I have learned to appreciate the beauty of C and its need to be a control freak in some cases.

    To solve the debate, I am going to quote the words of one of my professors. "A programming language is a tool in a tool box". There are several things wrong with that analogy. I tend to think that a programming language is like a woman and learning one is like dating.

    Im my 5 year 'dating' life I dated more languages than girls. Perl, Python, Tcl, C ... each have their own attractions and turn offs. C# is something I haven't approached yet. But like dating, it just broadens your outlook (not to mention the fact that it is fun).

    There should be not be fear of a new programming language. It is the new girl in town. It is true that one has to be wary that C# is a Microsoft baby. If it turns out that you cannot use C# without paying MS big bucks and the returns are not justifiable there are always other alternatives to look to.

    When I was a sophomore, I was scared when some senior started talking about C++. I thought, another language. Oh no. But once you have mastered the basics of what I referer to as the dating game, you can romance almost any girl. Even if it was the girl with red hair and pierced ears (Perl) or the one that you can't take your eyes off of (Scheme).
    • by kelzer ( 83087 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:56PM (#3332095) Homepage
      There should be not be fear of a new programming language. It is the new girl in town.

      Don't date that C# slut! Next thing you know, she'll be knocked up, and you'll be gettin' married whether you love her or not, because Bill Gates will be pointing a shotgun at your back.

      It is true that one has to be wary that C# is a Microsoft baby. If it turns out that you cannot use C# without paying MS big bucks and the returns are not justifiable there are always other alternatives to look to.

      Just try to leave her, and Bill will hunt you down. Stay away from her - she's trouble!

  • The first thing that caught my attention was the 5 year timespan. Does anything last five years in computing any more? Seems these days that things flame out fairly quickly, say within 2 or 3 years, or hang on damned near forever.

    Java seems to be in the damned near forever category. There is a lot to recommend it, but, more importantly, there is already a lot of java code out in corporate infrastructures and corporations don't like to rewrite from the ground up.

    That's not to say java won't shrink in terms of overall importance. That seems a likely outcome of more competition, especially given the poor experiences many people have had trying to implement java-based solutions.

    C# is only one -- though a signficant one. Off in the weeds, python use is slowly growing, and python can fill many of the same purposes served by java. With Mozilla finally biting the bullet and declaring an API-frozen 1.0, some of its tools might also find a spot.

    Java is like every other technology that ever existed: sooner or later something or some things come along to displace it. Not kill it necessarily, but displace it.

  • by zephc ( 225327 )
    "We have a beautiful language here in Java; it has achieved industry-wide support and is pushing forward with great velocity. What can we do to support it?"

    Well, another song product, Open Firmware, has a song [sun.com] (though it's not a programming language... but it does use Forth!)
  • The Dean of Engineering at my university was overheard saying "Boy, switching the curriculum from C to Java was a big mistake".

    Java has some really nice features but I find it more useful in the learning situation. In real life I found C and C++ much more useful.
  • Absolutely!

    But then, so is Unix. NT is going to absolutely destroy it.

    ...at least that's what I'm reading from a magazine circa 1987.

  • Don't forget that Visual Studio costs over $1000. There are a large number of decent Java tools that are free (as in beer.) For the notoriously cheap developer community, that is significant.
  • just like Java, you have the option of downloading or not the .NET framework. So, the fact that Java is bundled or not with Windows won't make much difference.
  • by johnburton ( 21870 ) <johnb@jbmail.com> on Friday April 12, 2002 @05:36PM (#3331973) Homepage
    .NET platforms will win over from java because .NET compilers to .EXE and .DLL files which look and seem to work just like the ones you are used to. Of course they are completely and utterly different behind the scenes, but that one simple fact makes .NET seem familier but new and exciting, and not at all like all those scary java .class files. Ok, so I exagerate, but I think that having .EXE and .DLL files really WILL make a lot of difference to how people percieve this platform.
    • Let's see, ".EXE" files are those nasty things that sometimes spead viruses when attached to emails, and ".DLL" files are those nasty things that inspired the term "DLL Hell".

      ".CLASS" files sound pretty classy, so I think I'll stick with Java.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    The problem with the Java Environment is the integration of the tools. Even beta 2 of .net I was amazed at the productivity gains. Even thou I hate the beast they do have very good tools. The tools will make the difference. They did in the early 90's with VB. People bitch about performance that is not the case. If you look at VB It had performance problems compared to C MFC apps but it was highly adopted because a lot of people could easily churn out code. Even people that should not ever write code.

    C# as a language does not matter it is very similar to java. It is about the tools and can you get a business analyst that churns out VB code who has never used a command line to adopt your environment.

    Jbuilder is a nice IDE and ANT is nice for makes but while I am vi ing an apache .conf file and figuring out where my classpath is pointing too and why my servlet is not making its JDBC call the .Net guy has already deployed their app and is fetching XML records from SQL Server.

    Which one will they adopt and why? A nerdy UNIX /Java person that can be as productive as a .NET / VB business analyst will cost a company more.
    I hope the beast does win but it is about the tools!!!! History repeats itself.

  • Why care? (Score:2, Insightful)

    Java is a good language, but starting to show some of the wear all languages do as they age. C# and up coming J# are new languages and like all new languages build on the past with new features, requirements, and libraries. Java did the same thing when it came out, building on C++, Smalltalk, and other languages.

    Bottom line Java isn't going to go away, if you like it keep using it. You will have plenty of work for years to come. C#/J# (they all compile down to CRL anyway) are new and cool and people will use them.

    Be happy, you got Java because Sun thought they had a better tool than C++ with MFC or OWL or whatever library. MS has upped the ante in order to compete and came out with the CLR and C# and other languages CLR will support. Now its Sun's or anyone elses turn to come out with something better. It called evolution and we all benefit from it.
  • why not settle for a language that just won't die: Lisp.

    I'm serious.

  • by glassware ( 195317 ) on Friday April 12, 2002 @07:30PM (#3332559) Homepage Journal
    that Microsoft has discovered the key to getting good press on Slashdot. What if some of the unusual articles that have appeared recently are coming (whether directly or indirectly) from Microsoft PR?

    By Way Of Example: This article, the strangely prophesied Unix Isn't Dead [slashdot.org], and this booster [slashdot.org] for the next version of Windows.

    Although I might be paranoid to wonder about this, it would be a pretty impressive use of grassroots resources. It seems like what they're doing is writing articles that cast doubt on the official Microsoft position. These articles naturally become (in a free spirited discussion site) a thread with some people defending MS and some people attacking it, which provides an excellent position for posting Microsoft's stronger arguments which then reach open-minded developers.

    Anyways, it's an amusing thought. :)

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