Posts tagged with "oracle"


This industry sure moves fast

Owing to an incredibly busy month with family and university, this has been the quietest Rubenerd.com has been since January 2008 (check it out). For interest sake, I thought I'd check out one of the few things I was talking about back then:

Trolltech bought by Nokia, MySQL bought by Sun Microsystems... what is the world [of free and open source software] coming to?

While surprising at the time, Nokia has since found itself on the rocks and looking to divest itself of Qt, and Sun Microsystems was bought by Oracle. Just goes to show just how fast this industry moves!


The Oracle SPARC SuperCluster T4-4

I'll be honest, I want an empty one of these to use as a bookshelf. Don't suppose I can just buy the rack, can I?

As I mentioned on Twitter, I'm so glad Oracle largely kept the designs of the Sun server hardware. They're to servers what Apple are to consumer tech, in my opinion.


Apache donated to OpenOffice.org, and LibreOffice

So now OpenOffice.org has been donated to Apache, what now?

Humbleness pie

First, I like to think I admit when I'm wrong. When Oracle bought Sun Microsystsms, I wrote what it could mean for OpenOffice.org (OOo) in 2009:

OpenOffice.org is a real wildcard. One could potentially see Oracle leverage OOo against Microsoft, or perhaps they could pull a Novell and instead fork it into an independent stream and an Oracle branded product that could use groupware Oracle develops. The possibilities are extremely intriguing.

Obviously I misjudged Larry Ellison's priorities. It's pretty clear now Oracle only really bought Sun for Java and Solaris. As I said on my post about Singapore's president, unsurprising though disappointing that they let OOo stall.

Fork in the eye

The news of OOo donation wouldn't necessarily be interesting in and of itself, but last year many (possibly most) of the OOo team left Oracle after feeling unease in the direction and future of the project under new management, and formed the Document Foundation to develop their own fork in the form of LibreOffice (LO).

LO has come a long way in these intervening months. The core applications have received cosmetic tweaks, and under the covers performance has been drastically improved. I speak from experience, my ThinkPad X40 could barely load the later versions of OOo, but LO not only runs but runs surprisingly fast. They deserve a huge amount of credit for this.

Well it seems Ellison or the powers-that-be at Oracle called their bluff. Taking to hear their concerns about freedom, not only have they released OOo from their corporate control, but have gone one step further and released it to the Apache Foundation who's licence is more permissive than the GPL LO adopted.

Copyright, Copyleft, Copycentre

It's hard to see how this will pan out. While LO has most of the talent and has replaced OOo in bleeding edge distributions such as Fedora and Arch, I'd wager an overpriced licence for Microsoft Office that most large installation bases with more conservative CTOs are still on OOo.

Ultimately what it'll come down to is how well New OOo is maintained, and whether they'll be able to capture back some of that lost mindshare. LO are already organising conferences, and have removed most of the OOo branding from their apps. Wait, I'd better say applications or Apple will sue me ;).

I know I'll be sticking with LO for now; I philosophically prefer the Apache, BSD and MIT licences to the GPL, but they have the better product and some real momentum that has been lacking in this otherwise stagnant and uninteresting field of software.

Footnotes

  • I use LO because it still offers the best compatibility with Microsoft Office files I have to use daily, and that includes KOffice, Google Docs and iWork.
  • If you find the names LibreOffice and iPad funny at the same time, you're an immature Australian or Kiwi. Heh, LibreOffice.

The Death Star vs The Borg

Wish I could take credit for the comparison, but Patrick Mueller beat me to it by about four years.

I use NetBeans... or at least will continue to until it gets canned!


Making sense of LibreOffice

Have I missed anything? Feel free to correct :)


Java dying? Did Apple do it? An app store?

Classic Java logo

There's a lot of guff going on about Java right now, so I'm going to try my hand at clearing the air. Obviously my grammar has already taken a beating judging from the tersely efficient but horribly structured heading.

Java is dying

Dying in this case is a relative term, but despite the disappointing failure of the write once, run everywhere model that was supposed to solve OS dependencies on the desktop, Java is very much alive and well. Anyone who's been in any corporate, large enterprise environment knows that Java is thoroughly entrenched and isn't going anywhere any time soon. Like a boss. Google also uses it for tons of stuff, to afford myself the use of some sophisticated computer science terminology.

Oh yeah and Minecraft. Addictive games like that push my buttons and stroke my OCD tendencies WAY too easily, so I'm simply refraining from playing it. Call it an act of self preservation.

Apple killed JavaME on phones

There are two arguments about Apple killing Java. The older one is that Apple killed JavaME by not bundling it with the iPhone. I'd argue JavaME was functionally dead long before Apple came into the picture. I'd also say that to be fair, Android, webOS and Windows Mobile Phone Enterprise Corporate Home Premium Edition Service Pack 7 have done their bit to nip JavaME in the bud too. Granted Android [kinda] runs a Java VM in the form of Dalvik, but its legal standing is dubious at best, and it's unrelated to JavaME.

I remember writing a to-do list for my Motorola RAZR back in the day. It was easy enough to understand if a LittleCumbersomeAndVerbose, but it ran so horribly slowly and took so long to load I gave up on it.

To break up this post, here are the girls from some sort of scientific railgun show, with a phone, a laptop and a cup of coffee. Apt, right?

Apple killed Java on the desktop

The other argument is Apple killed Java on the desktop by removing it from Mac OS X. They didn't kill Java, they merely deprecated their internally developed version and passed responsibility back to Oracle and the open source community to provide it. They're in the process of doing so.

For those who don't remember, Apple developed a custom version of Java starting with Mac OS X 10.0 as a way to more thoroughly integrate Java apps into the OS and to afford more visual consistency. If you recall, for a long time Java apps didn't really look like their host OSs at all (and in certain circumstances they still don't, at least not very well). The first Java I ever wrote was on my iBook in 2001, go figure.

Depending on who you talk to, Apple engineers were also forced to craft their own Java implementation given Sun's lack of interest in the platform. If that sounds familiar, this is just the apathy that Macromedia and Adobe displayed for the Mac with their Flash plugin that was so slow, unreliable and insecure that Apple was forced to write a container around it for Safari. Shipping an older version didn't help either, but hey!

Apple were small fish before and had to accept whatever they could from the high and mighty, now they are in a position to dictate terms... and Steve Jobs certainly holds grudges! As Adobe is realising now that Flash is not included by default in the MacBook Air, if Oracle wants Java on the Mac, it's up to them now to prove to Apple customers that they need it. It also puts native applications at an advantage, which is a convenient fact for Apple ;).

You know what'd be cool?

I'd actually be really interested in seeing a cross platform Java app store to prove to us that write once, run everywhere is not only viable, but preferable to vendor lock-in. They could sell Minecraft, and auto-update software like NetBeans and Makagiga. Oh yeah that reminds me, Makagiga is pretty cool. But that's for another post.

As I started this post by saying, Java is thoroughly entrenched in the enterprise. Whether or not Oracle has any interest in recapturing the consumer space where Java needs the most help is the ultimate question.


Oracle is taking over my Mac

Oracle in my dock

Don't look now but... I was just looking at my dock before and I realised I use more Oracle software now than Apple software. Don't worry though, they didn't force my dock to be horizontal, I only did that so I could take a better screenshot. If you have it on the side, it would have taken up more space.

Does this mean I'm more of a lackey for Ellison than Jobs?

UPDATE: Maybe I spoke too soon!


Jonathan Schwartz leaves Sun, fanboy response

Jonathan Schwartz's weblog at Sun Microsystems

It's official, Jonathan Schwartz is no longer an employee of Sun Microsystems, now a subsidiary of Oracle Inc. Fortunately for us in his goodbye blog post he's said his blog will be transferred to a new address and maintained, and he's even jumped on Twitter again.

Today's my last day at Sun. I'll miss it. Seems only fitting to end on a #haiku. Financial crisis/Stalled too many customers/CEO no more

If you've been a reader of my blog for a while you'd know how much I admire Schwartz, one could say to an unhealthy extent. A quick paroozle of the Jonathan Schwartz tag here proves this, and this unabashed brown-nosing post from early 2009 would serve to remove all further doubt!

Sun might not have shot through all expectations and taken over the world during his tenure as CEO, but his down to earth friendlyness was refreshing, and I loved reading his official blog.

Okay, the real reason!

Steve Jobs may be a genius, but Jonathan would still be my first choice for hanging out at a coffee shop if I had the chance. For a period of time I even tried to grow a Schwartz ponytail but failed miserably. There's something about a CEO of a major corporation that can look classy with a ponytail that's just too awesome for words.

Anyway I wish Jonathan all the best in his future efforts, and I'm excited to see where he goes from here. Who knows, I might still get to have coffee with him one day... coming to Singapore or Canberra any time soon Jon? :)


The Sun Oracle Database Machine

Sun Oracle Exadata V2 server

Ever since I postulated back in April as to what a combined Oracle-Sun company would do, in the back of my mind I've also been thinking what it would look like. Now we get a glimpse in the form of the Oracle Exadata V2 server, the second advertisement after their triumphant "Oracle Buys Sun" faux billboard graphic.

I'm surprised they kept the Sun Microsystems logo and the basic design of the hardware, but I'm even more surprised they positioned the Sun logo above the Oracle one. I get the feeling it's not something that should be read into much, but perhaps it's a symbolic tip of the hat and to appease people scared about what Oracle may do with Sun. Don't worry guys, Sun is still alive, and all that. Or maybe it's because "Sun Oracle" is much easier to say than "Oracle Sun". I have no idea what I'm saying here.

Most likely this is a transitionary product, we'll probably see completely new designs in coming quarters that probably won't include a Sun logo. Then again when Commodore Business Machines bought MOS Technology in the 1980s they ended up rebranding the subsidiary but it largely operated independently and still put their logo on all their integrated circuits, so who knows.

Sun Oracle Exadata V2 server

Personally I think it made far more sense for Oracle to be Sun's suitor instead of IBM given that they already had a lot of money and time invested in parallel products. Solaris is an excellent operating system, and an Oracle database on Sun software and hardware is a compelling mix.

I guess I'm still just a little sad to see such an iconic company slowly get eaten by another; as I've repeatedly said here I really admire Sun Microsystems. Perhaps I'll have a greater chance of owning my own Sun workstation after buying one on eBay after a few years. That is, if having original Sun hardware without an Oracle sticker doesn't increase its value too much.


Twitter is a place of great [t]wit!

For the convenience of those who aren't using Twitter I have transcribed a hilarious, witty conversation I had with Lensflared on Twitter this evening.

Lensflared: Come on Sun, where are you?

Rubenerd: @Lensflared Last I heard Sun was being bought by Oracle :D

Lensflared: @Rubenerd Does that mean the Sun will shine even brighter, or will it cause an irreversible eclipse? :-)

Rubenerd: @Lensflared AAAAAAAAAA! Okay you win! :D

What I love about such "high level" nonsense is if you weren't a serious computer nut you'd have no idea what's going on! Or perhaps in this specific IDE context I should say a computer... bean? HA! Damn I should have replied with that instead, don't you hate it when you come up with a great comeback but only after the time when you could have used it?

I talked about this issue a bit more seriously back in early April.