Sun will open source Java "in months" Still working out howBy Nick Farrell: Wednesday 28 June 2006, 07:39SUN HAS indicated that it is only a few months from releasing Java under an open source licence.Simon Phipps, chief open-source officer for Sun, said that the company was trying to work out how to keep Java compatible as it did not want to threaten Java's "write once, run anywhere" concept.The move to Open Sauce followed the replacement of Scott McNealy as Sun CEO by Jonathan Schwartz. Schwartz is keen on open sourcing Java while McNealy always blocked it.However, according to Infoworld, there is a hard core of Sun middle managers who are opposed to the Open Sourcing of Java and are likely to present obstacles for its release under a new licence.
Sun continues its efforts to open source Java Sun Microsystems Inc. is planning to make more of its Java platform available as open source, but Canadian experts say the move could have more to do with marketing than software development. 9/12/2006 2:00:00 PM by Neil Sutton Sun has made efforts in the last year or two to open source more of its products. In June 2005, Sun launched its Glassfish project, providing access to portions of Java System Application Server Platform Edition 9 code under the Java Research Licence. In June of this year the company committed more Java to open source and confirmed recently that Java Standard Edition and Java Micro Edition (its mobile platform) will receive the open source treatment.“It's a natural thing to keep moving through the various editions of the Java platform, releasing them in open source form,” said Jean Elliott, director of developer marketing for Sun.The development community has been asking for the move away from proprietary code, and to a large degree it will be up to the community to help regulate the company's open source products, she said.There have been concerns in the past that the development platform could “fork,” or split into incompatible versions, if it's open-sourced. But developers place a premium on compatibility, which should help to keep the language in line, she said. “Sometimes we have to let the market decide,” she said. “That's a very important consideration for us . . . we've heard loud and clear that developers want to write applications that will run in as many as places as possible. They care that there's a compatible platform for them to run those applications on.