----------------------------------------------------------------
BEFORE YOU POST, search the faq at <http://java.apache.org/faq/>
WHEN YOU POST, include all relevant version numbers, log files,
and configuration files.  Don't make us guess your problem!!!
----------------------------------------------------------------

Javier Beas Careaga wrote:
> 
> Hey boys: may be that's good but it's passwd protected. Could any of you
> help with that to a newbie
> 
It's not password protected (now)

Copyright (C) 1999 InfoWorld Media Group Inc.

IBM, Sun ease deployment of Java apps on open platform 

By Dana Gardner 
InfoWorld Electric 

Posted at 7:02 AM PT, Oct 18, 1999 

The leading proponents of two of the hottest emerging technologies in 
IT -- Java and Linux -- will link arms this week. 

At the Java Developers Conference in San Jose, Calif., IBM will 
announce the free general availability of a Java Software Developer's 
Kit 1.18-compliant Java virtual machine (JVM) for the Linux operating 
system, with performance that exceeds that of JVMs running on Windows 
NT, IBM officials said. 

Meanwhile, Sun Microsystems is preparing to release in early 2000 a 
Java2-compliant JVM for Linux that brings the performance, functions, 
and Java HotSpot features of the latest Java specifications to the 
Linux community, according to sources close to Sun Microsystems. 

These technologies -- along with a spate of tools and compilers from 
IBM and Inprise -- will make it easier to deploy Java applications on 
Linux servers and to port existing Java applications to Linux. 

"Being able to run thousands of Java programs on the Linux OS without 
modification is a very compelling reason for our customers to consider 
Linux as their platform of choice," said Jeff Barca-Hall, chief 
technology officer at Inprise. 

IBM is also at work on a Java2 JVM for Linux. But Big Blue, which is 
broadly supporting Linux in its products and consulting services, 
chose to first deliver a current JVM based on Java Development Kit 
(JDK) 1.18. 

"We're not ready to put out the Java2 version yet, so we'll make the 
JDK 1.18 offering something to deploy in the interim," said Jeff 
Roberts, a Java marketing executive at IBM, in Austin, Texas. 

Sun is also working with the Blackdown Porting Group to bring Java2 to 
Linux. 

The JDK 1.18 Linux JVM is now available for free download at IBM's 
DeveloperWorks site, at www.ibm.com/developer. Moreover, IBM is now 
granting redistribution rights for the JVM to independent software 
vendors. 

Java developers should see the amount of tools available for Linux 
increase significantly following IBM's embracing of the platform. 

"Developers need this to happen, and the Blackdown efforts were not 
going as fast and as well as was hoped," said Sandra Potter, an 
analyst at the Aberdeen Group, in Boston. "This will push the 
acceptance for both Linux and Java. It will be a win-win [situation]." 

Developers see the JDKs as a way to reduce their reliance on Windows 
NT as a development environment. 

"I usually use Linux, but still need to go to Windows NT just to get 
better Java performance," said Mark Watson, a Java programmer, 
consultant, and author, in Sedona, Ariz. "With the JDKs and Borland 
tools on Linux, I will have to boot up Windows very infrequently." 

The Java and Linux kinship should also give Linux an enhanced presence 
in the developer community. 

"The shift that occurs when the new JDKs arrive is that Linux becomes 
a viable platform for application development on a broader scale. 
Clearly, Windows NT doesn't disappear, and it probably will continue 
to expand. But this accelerates the Linux development and deployment 
market," said Dave Kelly, an analyst at the Hurwitz Group, in 
Framingham, Mass. 

IBM Corp., in Armonk, N.Y., is at www.ibm.com. Inprise Corp., in 
Scotts Valley, Calif., is at www.inprise.com. Sun Microsystems Inc., 
in Palo Alto, Calif., is at www.sun.com. 

InfoWorld Editor at Large Dana Gardner is based in New Hampshire. 
Editor at Large Ed Scannell contributed to this article. 

-- 
Pierpaolo Fumagalli - IBM Center for Java Technologies
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


--
--------------------------------------------------------------
Please read the FAQ! <http://java.apache.org/faq/>
To subscribe:        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe:      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Archives and Other:  <http://java.apache.org/main/mail.html>
Problems?:           [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to