Netscape releases Free JVM, ElectricalFire 48
HoserHead writes
"Netscape has released a new JVM-JIT compiler called
ElectricalFire. It originally started as an in-house
commercial compiler project but is now purely Open Source:
there are now no plans to turn it into a commercial product.
ElectricalFire also contains none of Sun's code. Check it
out at its homepage
on mozilla.org." It's NPL'd and they are calling for
developers.
NPL, Noosphere, gimme gimme (Score:1)
(2) ElectricalFire has a tiny Noosphere. There are Free (GPL'd) JVM's available.
(3) I guess AOL has started cutting costs hardcore now. "Who needs these expensive developers when we can get people to do the work for free?"
Not a JVM! (Score:1)
it looks like EF is just a JIT compiler. It
is not a JVM like Kaffe or Japhar or the JDK.
JVM's are the IRC clients of early 2000's (Score:1)
It looks like everyone and their mom is going to implement their own JVM instead of working with existing code. It'll be just like IRC clients: a zillion implementations with little differentiation.
I find it very difficult to get excited about this new JVM. Any clever implementation tricks it may offer won't give it the advantage for long; they can be easily folded into existing open source JVM's.
Old news... (Score:1)
Really? (Score:1)
NPL, Noosphere, gimme gimme (Score:1)
If it's not L/GPL, it's crap.
EF needs Open Sourced Classlibs (Score:1)
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NPL, Noosphere, gimme gimme (Score:1)
There are no plans to make this a commercial project. Netscape just gave a fast JVM/JIT compiler with a lot of potential to the Open Source community (mozilla.org) and you're bashing them for it. Makes a *lot* of sense.
Why not GPL it? (Score:1)
I don't like the fact that there's more source code coming out that's incompatible with the GPL. I'd rather put my support behind TYA.
Is JIT technology any good? (Score:1)
Yawn (Score:1)
This is the biggest problem with open source - everybody wants the ego boost of doing their own project, rather than adding their time and effort to somebody else's project. So you end up with 30 half-assed projects instead of one or two good ones.
Have your cake... (Score:1)
- There is one commercial JVM project, Sun's, and it's produced a working JVM.
- There are a shitload of Open Source JVM projects, and not one of them has produced a working JVM. Kaffe? Nope, it doesn't work with any of my programs? ElectricalFire? Nope, no java.awt support. Japhar? No, same problem. GCJ? No. CACAO? No.
See, lots of projects, no results. If there were *one* project that all those people were contributing to, maybe there would be a hope in hell of actually producing something.
EF's a ways off. TYA works today. (Score:1)
ftp://gonzalez.cyberus.ca/pub/Linux/java/
Eddie Murphy movie quote is source (Score:1)
There was a band in it called "Sexual Chocolate" and I can only assume that's where it came from.
the movie itself was light fare, but pretty fuckin' funny IMHHO
NPL, Noosphere, gimme gimme (Score:1)
Regarding Kaffe... (Score:1)
ROFL! (Score:1)
Nothing new in this (Score:1)
NPL, Noosphere, gimme gimme (Score:1)
RMS likes the GPL, of course. I don't think he really likes the LGPL; it's a watered-down version of the GPL, which is what he really wants everyone to use. RMS probably considers the LGPL as a "necessary evil" that should be abolished in favor of the full GPL as soon as possible.
I seem to recall hearing (way back when) that RMS was very reluctant to release the LGPL, but eventually gave in and allowed it. (Notice that he always promotes the GPL over the LGPL.) No, I don't have a reference handy to substantiate that; it's just what I recall hearing or reading back when the LGPL was released.