Then my friend, if you are seeing differences in JDBC, then its most likely
the JDBC driver, not the JVM.   People, in my experience, are way too quick
to point the finger at the JVM or OS as oppose to looking a little closer to
home.

Although, you are wrong on a number of assumptions here ... "Hardware has
nothing to do with an apps code.. other than performance".

Be careful what you say in a public forum such as this.  You represent CSC,
a rather major consultancy services company, and they are careful of their
public profile.

||| -----Original Message-----
||| From: Jason Carlamere [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
||| Sent: 30 May 2003 18:02
||| To: jdjlist
||| Subject: [jdjlist] Re: Write Once, Run Anywhere
||| 
||| 
||| 
||| If we are talking about printing then yes Alan your right
||| 
||| but I am talking about applications in general...
||| 
||| 1 perfect example is JDBC.....  HP's SDK handles it totally 
||| different  than
||| suns JDK
||| 
||| .......whatever I am not going to go on with HP vs SUN
||| 
||| I really dont care what you believe I just know what I am 
||| experiencing
||| 
||| Hardware has nothing to do with an apps code.. other than 
||| performance

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