Guys,

I think you're missing the point - Chromebooks are meant to be a 'gateway'
to the cloud. Running Java apps locally defeats the point of the device.


On 16 January 2013 12:49, Casper Bang <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Doesn't this mean that they are almost useless for a Java developer?
>>
>
> Java runs* on my NAS, smartphone and tablet; all ARM devices. So I would
> disagree that ARM is almost useless for a Java developer. Although I've
> usually used pre-compiled cacao ipkg JRE on my NAS, you can download
> various compatible OpenJDK versions from Oracle:
>
> http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/embedded/resources/se-embeddocs/index.html<http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/embedded/resources/se-embeddocs/index.html#sysreqs?origref=http://pcloadletter.co.uk/2011/02/07/serviio-on-synology-nas-with-arm-cpu/>
>
> *Admittedly I usually resort to Mono or C instead, since working with
> signed bytes in Java makes you angry and depressed - not necessarily in
> that order.
>

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