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Solve : Microsoft puts Java on Cloud.? |
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Answer» Yes. Microsoft puts Java on Cloud. ... Rabellino announced the Azure addition at the O’Reilly Open Source Convention, being held this week in Portland, Oregon. “Customers will be able to run their Java workload in a fully supported environment,” he said.http://www.pcworld.com/article/2045106/microsoft-to-offer-java-as-a-service.html What is odd is that Oracle does not offer a SUITABLE package to fill the need for MS customers. Or is that to be expected? But of course you can get Java for your Windows Desktop. This post is about how MS has to get somebody to do a Java run time for its cloud service and platforms other than a desktop. Just sounds strange. Wait. There is more from the PCWord item. Quote ...Although Rabellino did not say why Microsoft hired an outside contractor to maintain the OpenJDK, the move is not a surprising one, given Microsoft’s rocky history with Java. The company launched its own version of the language, called J++, in 1996, the year after Java itself DEBUTED. ... Yeah, now I remember. Good old J++ Quote from: Geek-9pm on August 14, 2013, 10:49:07 PM Yes. Microsoft puts Java on Cloud. J++ was not Microsoft's own version of the language. It wasn't until they added features to Java to make it less of a crappy language that Sun started to get a bit annoyed. (Delegates, Event Handlers, sane native METHOD calls, callbacks, I could go on... |
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