Sun and BEA Push To Make Java Easy
By Carol Sliwa
LinuxInsider
07/05/04 6:00 AM PT
"The big theme is bringing Java to the masses," said Mark Driver, an
analyst at Gartner. "Studio Creator and what BEA is doing with Beehive
are targeted at bringing Java to the mortal man, making it more
attractive to the corporate IT programmer versus the highly skilled
systems programmers."

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Open-Source Incubator Project
The vendors announced plans for an open-source incubator project, called
Pollinate, to create Eclipse-based development tools that integrate with
Apache Beehive, an application runtime framework BEA turned over to the
open-source community.
"The big theme is bringing Java to the masses," said Mark Driver, an
analyst at Gartner (NYSE: IT)
. "Studio Creator and what BEA is doing with Beehive
are targeted at bringing Java to the mortal man, making it more
attractive to the corporate IT programmer versus the highly skilled
systems programmers."
A beta version of Pollinate is due this fall under the Eclipse Public
License. When it arrives, Eclipse users will get a chance to try BEA's
Java Control architecture, a light-weight server-side component model
that reduces the low-level plumbing code developers need to write.
'Sounds Like a Great Idea'
"That sounds like a great idea," said Michael Reagin, the Portland,
Ore.-based director of research and development at Providence Health
System, which uses BEA's application server and Eclipse. "It certainly
would support the vision of open-source, and I think it's going to be a
positive for BEA and Java in general."
Reagin said the nonprofit organization looked at commercial offerings
that required expensive, high-powered developer workstations and "didn't
see a whole lot of value compared to Eclipse." Only 30 percent of
Providence Health System's development work is done in Java, and it
gravitated toward the freely available Eclipse integrated development
environment
, he said.
Dave Cotter, director of developer marketing
at BEA, said that if a
vendor creates a control today, it works only on BEA's WebLogic. But
with Beehive, vendors could create controls for the Tomcat open-source
application server or any J2EE-based application server that supports
Beehive.
De Facto Framework?
"Developers want to know that they can use the framework and not be
locked into BEA's tools," said Driver. "The potential is that Beehive
could become the de facto framework for high-productivity products --
what we're calling the 'J2EZ space,' where time to market, low cost and
productivity are driving factors."
Sun's J2EZ offering, Java Studio Creator, will be available only to Sun
Developer Network subscribers. The $99 price includes a perpetual
license to Java Studio Creator and one year of product updates, upgrades
and access to premium content.
Last week, Sun released an early-access copy of its Java Studio
Enterprise tool, which adds support for the Unified Modeling Language
and application profiling.
Sun also unveiled the 4.0 release of its NetBeans application framework,
which adds support for the creation of Enterprise JavaBeans and Web
services and a project management system based on The Apache Software
Foundation's Ant. Keller said NetBeans 4.0 could be out in late summer
or early fall.
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