You have made an unauthorized inquiry. If you continue to make unauthorized inquiries questioning the necessity of a Microsoft product or component, I will have no choice but to report you to Microsoft's Department of Product Education, Acceptance, and Conformity. There, you will be sent and held against your will, subjected to re-education measures until you no longer demonstrate a propensity to question the necessity or usefulness of any Microsoft product or component.Why do I need the "Java Virtual Machine"?
Originally posted by: tcsenter
You have made an unauthorized inquiry. If you continue to make unauthorized inquiries questioning the necessity of a Microsoft product or component, I will have no choice but to report you to Microsoft's Department of Product Education, Acceptance, and Conformity. There, you will be sent and held against your will, subjected to re-education measures until you no longer demonstrate a propensity to question the necessity or usefulness of any Microsoft product or component.Why do I need the "Java Virtual Machine"?
Originally posted by: Mrburns2007
First SUN sued to get Java in Windows then they sued to get JAVA out of Windows. To funny.
Basically M$ doesn't want to pay SUN for the linsense so now we all have to use the crappy SUN Java. Java is the first thing from microsoft that was basically small and efficient compared with a competing product.
Originally posted by: PrincessGuard
Originally posted by: Mrburns2007
First SUN sued to get Java in Windows then they sued to get JAVA out of Windows. To funny.
Basically M$ doesn't want to pay SUN for the linsense so now we all have to use the crappy SUN Java. Java is the first thing from microsoft that was basically small and efficient compared with a competing product.
To be fair to Sun, the MS JVM is "small and efficient" because it is based on an ancient version of Java that Sun made obsolete almost 2 years ago. Some pretty major changes and additions have happened since then.
Originally posted by: KeyserSoze
Quick question. I'm not sure about this, and it's why I'm asking.
Didn't Sun sue MS because they didn't represent Java properly in MS J++. Like using MS API's in their Dev?
Just Wondering.
KeyserSoze
TOS are for AOL losers, not tech companies.Originally posted by: gopunk
that's my understanding... they complained that ms was violating the TOS or something. naturally, ms obeyed the law, and ceased violating it
ahaha i love how MS screwed Sun over on that one...