Oracle submits standards proposal to Java group
Computerworld -
Oracle Corp. today announced its attempt to establish a standards-based way for vendors to get their Java development tools to work together. But it's unclear how much support the proposal will draw and whether it will help ease tension among some Java vendors.
Oracle submitted a specification for a new application programming interface (API) to the Java Community Process (JCP), which Sun Microsystems Inc. established to help Java technology evolve. But the Oracle proposal has yet to be accepted by the JCP executive committee, which will vote on the measure two weeks from today, according to Ted Farrell, architect and director of strategy for application development tools at Oracle.
"It's a good thing if it bears fruit, and it will bear fruit if the Java community picks it up," said Ted Schadler, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Mass.
Farrell said that every Java vendor currently has a proprietary API for its Java integrated development environment (IDE). The creation of a standard API would eliminate the need for a tools vendor to build a different extension every time it wants to get its tools to work with another vendor's IDE or an open-source development platform such as Eclipse, founded by IBM, and NetBeans, started by Sun, he said.
So far, Oracle has announced support for its proposed "Standard Extension API for Integrated Development Environments" from only three vendors -- Sun, Macromedia Inc. and JetBrains Inc.
Mike Gilpin, an analyst at Cambridge, Mass.-based Giga Information Group Inc., said that he wouldn't put odds at any better than even that Oracle's proposal will ease tensions among major tools vendors and aid product integration. For now, Gilpin said, the Eclipse development platform has the momentum.
IBM donated its Eclipse platform to the open-source community last year. Tools vendors that build to the Eclipse platform allow their users to work from a single portal-like interface with any other tools that have been extended to work with Eclipse. The Eclipse project is now managed by a consortium of vendors that includes IBM, Borland Software Corp., Fujitsu Software Corp., Rational Software Corp. and Sybase Inc.
Oracle will add its name to that list later this week when it announces its election to the Eclipse board. Farrell, who will serve as Oracle's representative on the board, said his company wants to ensure that Eclipse users have the same benefits when building to the Oracle platform as users of the Oracle 9i JDeveloper tool have.
"We believe by joining the board, we will be a positive
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