Hmm,

the primary product of JetBrains runs on top of Swing  - correct?

Sven

Am 12.03.2018 07:43 schrieb "Geertjan Wielenga" <
[email protected]>:

> My understanding is that the primary reason for JetBrains to create Kotlin
> was so that the language IntelliJ IDEA would be written in would be
> controled by JetBrains.
>
> In other words, JetBrains doesn’t seem to me to be a guardian of Java, in
> any way.
>
> Gj
>
> On Monday, March 12, 2018, cowwoc <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Maybe... but it's not hard to imagine a negative spin to this story.
> >
> > Any way you look at it, recent events will increase the fragmentation of
> > the Java platform.
> >
> > Oracle just gave away Java EE and Java SE desktop. All they have left is
> > Java SE server-side and, to a great degree they don't get paid for that.
> > Most servers run Linux where they will never see a dime. Java on cell
> > phones got killed for different political and legal reasons.
> >
> > Java on the browser might pick up by way of WebAssembly, but it will not
> > help Oracle financially.
> >
> > JetBrains and friends are strongly diversified in web development and
> > alternative languages that run on the Java platform (e.g. Kotlin). The
> > latter don't benefit much from recent JDK releases. Most releases are
> > Java-language-oriented and the platform is already good enough for their
> > needs. If Oracle drops the ball on the platform (even indirectly by
> > reducing the amount of paid employees), I can imagine these alt-languages
> > jumping ship from Java to .NET without a major impact to JetBrains.
> >
> > Something major will have to change in the next 1-2 years, otherwise we
> > will experience increasing fragmentation of the Java platform.
> Open-source
> > will actually make matters worse on this front.
> >
> > So yeah, we got what we asked for (open-sourcing Java) but it wasn't what
> > people had secretly hoped for (strong Java development, for free).
> >
> > I hope I turn out to be wrong.
> >
> > Gili
> >
> > On 2018-03-12 12:20 AM, Wade Chandler wrote:
> >
> >> On Mar 11, 2018, at 7:38 PM, Chuck Davis <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >>> That white paper says to me jdk11 is the end of the road for JSE at
> >>> Oracle.  Without Swing/JavaFX I can't think of a single reason to have
> >>> JSE
> >>> on a computer.
> >>>
> >> Maybe, but all the more reason for the stewards they mention. One can
> >> certainly run servers and services as Java applications on those systems
> >> too. But, yes, not directly making any money for Oracle. But SMBs can
> >> definitely make money off these things, and if the community wants to
> keep
> >> this stuff going, then they’ll have to chip in on the bits they care
> about.
> >> This was the main point of my writing in the first place; to figure out
> >> what we can do to support it. I imagine JetBrains will be involved as
> well.
> >> They are very dependent with their current products.
> >>
> >> The message of the white paper was clear: both Apple and Microsoft own
> >>> their platforms and the day is not too distant when both will exclude
> >>> Java
> >>> from running on their platform.  Apple already stopped shipping Java.
> >>>
> >>> “Exclude” seems overkill considering other environments/runtimes exist
> >> on both; Node, Qt, Rust, Go, etc.. .Net even exists on Mac. Them not
> >> shipping something directly is not the same as exclude.
> >>
> >>
> >> The message is clear:  migrate to .net for windows or swift for mac.
> Java
> >>> will only be running on Linux in the near future and that market is not
> >>> big
> >>> enough to be attractive to Oracle.  There will be no more
> cross-platform
> >>> Java (or anything else) development.  Browsers will continue to be
> >>> available on all platforms -- if you want to play on somebody else's
> >>> platform you will abide by their rules.
> >>>
> >> The browsers everyone is using on those platforms are not written in the
> >> languages you mention, so I don’t see that as the show stopper.
> >>
> >> It is a sad day but, admittedly, exclusivity is not a new idea to either
> >>> Apple or Microsoft.
> >>>
> >>> What is the remedy?  Make alternatives so attractive IT managers will
> >>> CHOOSE to leave either MS or Apple for the alternative.
> >>>
> >> I don’t see that as a goal of the NB community, and it certainly doesn’t
> >> do anything for all the consumer devices. I do think we can help support
> >> desktop Java since we highly depend on it.
> >>
> >> Wade
> >>
> >> =======================
> >>
> >> Wade Chandler
> >> e: [email protected]
> >> t: @wadechandler
> >> https://www.linkedin.com/in/wade-chandler
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
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> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
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> >
> >
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