Sun celebrates 10 years of Java
Sun celebrates 10 years of Java

Sun kicks off Java's 10th birthday

Campus bash celebrates success of processor-independent language

Written by Tom Sanders in Santa Clara, California

Advertisement

Sun Microsystems has kicked off Java's 10th birthday celebrations with a party for employees who have worked on the programming language over the past decade.

The event took place at the company's Santa Clara campus. Sun plans a more public celebration at the JavaOne developer conference in San Francisco 27-30 June.

The company first spoke about Java publicly in 1995, although development had started as early as 1991.

The processor-independent language was created by James Gosling to power an interactive remote control for home entertainment devices, featuring an interactive touch-screen user interface

As the project moved from the development lab to real-world applications, the developers targeted the video on demand market. They were too far ahead of their time, however, and the project failed.

"The scenarios we thought of struck us more as science fiction than reality," Gosling said at the celebration last Friday. "Before Java launched we were wondering what we were doing."

Tim Lindholm, one of the early developers, told vnunet.com: "By mid-1994 we were just trying to keep the Sun brass from killing our project." Lindholm is the architect of the Java 2 Micro Edition platform and currently works as a Distinguished Engineer with Sun.

But the rise of the internet came to the rescue. The developers realised that a language that runs on any device regardless of operating system or hardware would be of great benefit for this new computer network.

"We did have the kind of megalomaniac dreams that we would change computing. That was deliberate without any sense of irony," said Lindholm.

"But we also realised that a new language has zero chance [of making it]. We were amazed that we got any users but, when we got them, we said: 'Of course!'"

In 1995 the technology jumped into the mainstream of computing when Sun and Netscape signed an agreement to bundle Java with the Netscape Navigator browser.

Today Sun claims a total of two billion devices worldwide running Java, most of them mobile phones. But the technology also has a strong position in the world of enterprise application integration and on the web.

"If you're doing a financial transaction today, it has been touched by some of the people here," Gosing told vnunet.com, pointing at the crowd of several hundred people attending the party.

Tags:

Related articles

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Do you agree?

Most commented stories

IT white papers

Search vnunet IThound

Top categories

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Watch

05 Sep 2008

8.64 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

Podcast image

04 Sep 2008

12.7 MBComputing podcast 4 September 2008 More...

Podcast logo

02 Sep 2008

8.39 MBEco-Entrepreneur Podcast: Bulldog More...

Poll

INTERNET EXPLORER 8

INTERNET EXPLORER 8

Are you intending to download Internet Explorer 8 when it becomes available?

Previous poll results

Spotlight

LogMeIn Rescue+Mobile

BlackBerry gets LogMeIn remote support

Rescue+Mobile lets a support technician take control of the handset   More...

Dell manufacturing plant

Dell planning factory closures to cut costs

Report claims that PC maker is looking to sell off...  More...

Google Chrome

More growing pains for Chrome

Google wrestles with licensing and security problems   More...

Smartphone

US takes 3G crown from Europe

Americans finally catch up with Europeans in adoption of 3G   More...

Primary Navigation