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So What? - It Seems That JavaOne Isn't Just Nerd Nirvana Anymore...
This Is A Good Sign.
By: Ajit Sagar
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Yes, I was in San Francisco last month - but unlike the other 25,000 pilgrims, I wasn't fortunate enough to pay full homage to the Mecca of Java: JavaOne 2000. Instead, I was trapped in somewhat less than invigorating business meetings. I was also in a hurry to get back to Dallas to my wife and my brand new (two-week old) baby boy. However, I did manage to sneak out for a few hours on two separate days to the Moscone Center in downtown San Francisco to sip from the Java technology cup.... Although my impressions of JavaOne this year are based mainly on this brief interlude, I've been following the conference closely via the Web and other means. And let me tell you one thing, folks - I was disappointed. Later I talked to several of my friends and fellow nerds who had attended the full conference. They concurred. This year the excitement and the energy were nowhere close to last year's JavaOne. Later, on my Dallas-bound plane, my thoughts wandered back to JavaOne. And suddenly the reason why this year's show seemed more lukewarm hit me: there were very few surprises! Think about it. What was new at this conference? Granted, there were 150 technical sessions. All the hotels were booked as usual. Gimmicks abounded, congregations of nerds were found aplenty and there was much pomp and show. So what? As far as the Java platform itself is concerned, everything was old news. EJB architecture? Announced last year. The three lives of the Java Platform - J2ME/J2SE/J2EE? Announced last year. Jini, Java 2D, Collections, HotSpot - all these are last year's news. The small device market? Well, 3Com and Sun had much to say about it - last year. Microsoft's JVM? Last year's controversy. Version 1.3 of the JDK was released a couple of months before JavaOne this year. But this release didn't introduce any new APIs. In contrast, last year's announcement of Java 2 was replete with new APIs, a redefined vision of Sun's Java Platform and major enhancements in the Java language. The 1.3 release is mainly bug fixes, performance improvements and enhancements to some of the existing APIs. No groundbreaking announcements this year. At JavaOne 2000 Sun made numerous announcements including major initiatives with the Java Community Process, Java Web Start software and Forté for Java, Community Edition. Sun also updated the industry on initiatives including XML, JavaServer Pages technology, the Enterprise JavaBeans architecture and so on. However, all these are developments related to existing initiatives. Most of these are not technology advancements but, rather, tactical and strategic decisions for the Java community.
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