| By RIA News Desk | Article Rating: |
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| May 19, 2008 01:15 PM EDT | Reads: |
7,058 |

According to Keene, "After 10 years, Java remains an extremely complex development environment with nothing even approaching an easy learning curve."He continues:
"The Sun promise to put Java runtimes everywhere is meaningless if nobody wants to develop for those runtimes. Adobe and Microsoft are doing a far better job making their tools simple enough for mere mortals and focusing on the presentation layer."
Keene, who as WaveMaker CEO notes that his company has hitched its wagon to Java, offers the following recommended steps for curing what her terms "the Java flu":
- Fight for the low end: in modern
warfare, death may come from above. In technology, death comes from below. Ten
years from now, who will have more power over IT - web designers or core
developers? If Microsoft and Adobe win the designers today, Java developers will
be the Cobol developers of tomorrow.
- Make Java easier: something is wrong
when very useful but also very complex code frameworks like Spring are
considered the "easy" way to do Java development. Java needs to be easy enough
for your mother to build her web-based phone list with it. I'm talking
Hypercard/Filemaker/Access easy.
- Make Java prettier: just put a bullet
in JavaFX and adopt something with momentum like Dojo or Ext. If you just can't
stomach Javascript, then adopt GWT.
- Make Java fun: can't do this without
doing the first three items.
As for JavaFX, one of the main announcements at JavaOne last week, Keene was not impressed:
"The world needs Sun to stand behind one of the 200+ AJAX frameworks already out there, not create yet another one."
Published May 19, 2008 Reads 7,058
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