- Mar 18, 2003
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http://www.theserverside.com/news/thread.tss?thread_id=33795
I know I've argued against this in the past, but some of the points you guys have made, as well as other experiences I've had lately, made me realize that this would be a really good thing.
Of course there are many attempts at open source jvms out there that just can't reach a level of compatibility that would actually make them useful. I'm hoping that Apache's organized processes and industry support (from IBM in particular) will allow them to actually succeed.
From that announcement:
Edit:
CNet coverage
Preliminary FAQ
An opinion from a Sun dude
I know I've argued against this in the past, but some of the points you guys have made, as well as other experiences I've had lately, made me realize that this would be a really good thing.
Of course there are many attempts at open source jvms out there that just can't reach a level of compatibility that would actually make them useful. I'm hoping that Apache's organized processes and industry support (from IBM in particular) will allow them to actually succeed.
From that announcement:
That sounds interesting because it would potentially allow people who don't like the apache license to easily create a new implementation, if it actually turns out to be simple enough (that's a big if). Particularly I'm thinking of the bsd folks, but do bsd users even care about java?a freely implementable specification of a modular VM and class library that allows for multiple, independent implementations
Edit:
CNet coverage
Preliminary FAQ
An opinion from a Sun dude