“Top Five Reasons to Like Glassfish” and “Could Glassfish become the next major App Sever?”

Gerrtjan has an interesting blog entry that I just came across from back in April that lists a few points that I wasn’t aware of with the Glassfish EE5 app server.

The most interesting of this points is his point #1 – ‘Glassfish is lazy’ – by this he is referring to a feature that the appserver only initializes the features you have configured and/or are using by your deployed apps. For example – if you deploy a webapp with no EJBs, only the servlet container is initialized, so you don’t pay a penalty for running small, simple apps on the server. So in this respect even if you are testing small webapps there may not be any compelling reason anymore to use Tomcat by itself?

There has been a huge amount of news coverage and blog posts on Glassfish in the past year, which prompts me to ask the question, “Where is JBoss?”. Since their buy out by RedHat they seemed to dropped off the face of the earth. Have their frequent and ‘full of themselves’ blog posts been tamed by corporate RedHat? Or do they have something up their sleeve that they have been working on that they are about to announce with great fanfare? Floyd Marinsescu on InfoQ.com is asking the question “Could Glassfish become the next major App Sever?”. Take a read of his post on InfoQ.com

Sun announces open source plans for Java

At JavaOne this year Sun announced that they had plans to open source parts of the Java platform, although at that time the details were thin. This week, Sun have announced that they will be open sourcing two critical parts of the Java platform, the javac compiler, and the Hotspot virtual machine – both of these will be released to the open source community by the end of 2006.

Up until this year Sun has resisted community pressures to open source Java, over worries that the language and the platform may ‘fork’ into different branches of Java that may diverge in their language support and become incompatbile. This is not something that happens often in the open source world, and if it does it is usually because of good reasons, to address particular very specific needs.

It will be interesting to see how the Java platform evolves past this point, and longer term what this will mean for Sun and their involvement with the Java platform.

PC’s 25th birthday – “The 25 greatest PC’s of all time” – PCWorld

This year is 25 years since IBM launched the first IBM PC in 1981. PC World have put together a list of 25 of the ‘Greatest PC’s of All Time’ – the list is an interesting computing history of machines pre and post 1981, including greats such as the Apple II and the Comodore Amiga.

Noticably absent from the list are the machines big in Europe during the same time period. The Sinclair Spectrum was one of the first and the arguably the best selling home computer of it’s time in the UK (during the early 80’s) and most of Europe. Also missing from the list, the Atari ST – although if this is the ‘greatest’ of all time, it would have to be the ST Falcon030, which was an awesome piece of hardware, just out of reach of most people’s pockets at the time.