THE FUTURE OF "PURE JAVA".(Microsoft's Java plans in light of the court decision supporting Sun Microsystems' ownership of the programming language)(Company Business and Marketing)

Soft-Letter, November, 1998

Who controls the Java programming language? For the moment, the answer seems to be Sun Microsystems, which last week won a surprise injunction against Microsoft's efforts to "pollute" Java with Windows-specific extensions. Microsoft now has 90 days to rework its operating system and browser code so they pass Sun's "100% Pure Java" certification test--or else pull any non-compliant products off retail shelves.

Device independence is a fundamental design principle for Java, U.S. District Court Judge Ronald M. Whyte noted, which inherently limits Microsoft's right to create a proprietary version for Windows. "Adopting non-standard keywords and modifying a compiler to accept them violate Java's main objective that a Java program should compute the same result on...

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