Mark J. Wielaard Diary

Posts from November, 2007

Some small pieces

November 30th, 2007 at 22:11
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Free your IPhone

November 22nd, 2007 at 06:11
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Want some free java on your IPone? Robert Lougher posted some screenshots of JamVM and GNU Classpath running on it:

GNU Classpath/JamVM on iPhone

JamVM and Jetty on iPhone

Full war story on the JamVM forum.

One year ago - Java Liberation Day

November 13th, 2007 at 11:11
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November 13 2006 was Java Liberation Day. This brings back happy memories. On that day Sun acted and did not just make promises that one day they would release their java implementation as free software (something a lot of us GNU Classpath hackers didn’t believe would ever happen anymore - till that one day changed everything). They delivered the javac, hotspot and all of the phoneme code under the GPL (the other parts would follow at JavaOne) and they made one of the best GPL shows ever. The best part of the show (imho) is the “Collaborate” part where Jonathan Schwartz says “To the GCJ, GNU Classpath and Kaffe community, now is the time for us to to really get together and try to figure out how to do the right balancing equation, because we don’t want to do any redundant work with you and you don’t want to do any redundant work with us. And we are more than happy to pull all of our efforts together to go really promote ultimately what I think is what we all share, to drive freedom and opportunity for developers.” (see and listen for yourself - 40 seconds ogg/theora). I don’t think we are there yet, but we certainly made some nice progress this last year. We turned GNU Classpath and gcj into a free bootstrap platform for getting OpenJDK/IcedTea into all the major GNU/Linux distros. And I am especially happy to see various projects around GNU Classpath, like cacao, ikvm, midpath and others, find even more exciting things to do with this new future. They are creating interesting hybrids that will change the free software world. They bring libre java to your small and large devices, on Alpha, PowerPC, ARM, MIPS, and S390 architectures and create bridges with technologies, like mono/.net, that seemed impossible in the past. And everything comes with the source code which you are free to run, copy, distribute, study, change, share and improve in whatever way you want. Exciting times!

Rich Sands has a great overview of the java liberation year so far from Sun’s perspective.

Terrence Barr gives a Free Java ME and Mobile & Embedded Timeline.

Fedora 8 “Werewolf” and IcedTea

November 8th, 2007 at 17:11
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Fedora 8

Fedora 8 is finally golden. Download it now!
IcedTea is included, but only for the x86 and x86_64 architectures. GCJ is of course included for all architectures. The gcjwebplugin integration seems to just work out of the box.

IcedTea - GNU Classpath and OpenJDK in harmony

Also if you haven’t played with virtualization yet and want to really know what the hype about Cloud Computing and the true potential of Any App, Anywhere, Anytime is then take libvirt and virt-manager for a spin. Whether you want to do virtualization through qemu/kvm, xen, it just works and scripting is easy.

Make sure to read the Fedora 8 Release Summary for lots of new feature descriptions and screenshots (Fedora Spins, PulseAudio, Nodoka, system-config-firewall, system-config-printer, BlueZ, gcjwebplugin, NetworkManager, laptop quirks, Compiz-Fusion, Pirut, GNOME Online Desktop , SELinux Kiosk, PolicyKit, virt-manager, Transifex, Rsyslog, Eclipse Europa).

I have been running it since test 3 on my laptop and it is pretty solid and a nicely polished GNU/Linux distro.

Fedora 8 DVD

Friends

November 5th, 2007 at 16:11
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Red Hat and Sun Collaborate to Advance Open Source Java Technology

Red Hat fully supports Sun’s courageous decision to open source Java technology. After more than 10 years of continuous leadership, the Java technology ecosystem will enter an era of accelerated innovation and benefit from extreme pervasiveness on a wide range of environments,” said Sacha Labourey, CTO of JBoss, a division of Red Hat. “Through these strategic agreements, Red Hat commits to contribute to the Java platform and distribute a compatible, open source Java software implementation.”

One of the first benefits of this agreement is tighter alignment with the IcedTea project, which brings together Fedora and JBoss.org technologies in a Linux environment. IcedTea provides Free Software alternatives for the few remaining proprietary sections in the OpenJDK project.

“Sun welcomes Red Hat to the OpenJDK community,” said Rich Green, executive vice president, Software at Sun Microsystems. “It is a vote of confidence to have Red Hat, a leader in open source, engaging with the community on such a broad scale. When we open-sourced our Java software implementation, we hoped to see just this kind of collaboration between the GNU/Linux world and the Java technology ecosystem. It is gratifying to see the promise of open-source Java technology coming true with Red Hat’s leadership.”

Interesting times.