From: Adrian Tymes (wingcat@pacbell.net)
Date: Tue May 02 2000 - 22:53:43 MDT
Billy Brown wrote:
> Heh. Well, I know people who are learning Java, people who are teaching
> Java, and people who are talking about Java. I've yet to find anyone who has
> actually built anything with Java, aside from the personal toy-project stuff
> we all do to evaluate new technology.
Through this list, you know one ex-lead engineer on a database search
engine and visualization tool for annotations of genetic data, written
entirely in Java (save for the database itself), that was going to be a
company's leading product. (Until said company's sales department
caused its engineers to bail en masse. I won't name names.)
I'm also working on a Zelda-style RPG, though it's not going to be done
any time soon. Although it is only a game, it's significantly beyond
just evaluating the technology. (It is, however, a good excuse to learn
how to create music and sprites.)
> But it would be nice to be able to tell clients "yes, we can communicate
> with Java if you ever decide to use it for something". Its too bad Sun is so
> intent on maintaining a closed system.
Better to ask: "What are you using Java for?" If, for instance, they've
implemented a Web server using Java, anything that can speak HTTP can
speak with that server, regardless of whether that other thing's creator
knows anything about Java.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 15:28:22 MST