This is going to be a very short blog because the story itself is too good to add any comments:
Sun Microsystems Changes Ticker to JAVA
On August 23, 2007, "Sun announced Thursday that it would retire its SUNW moniker on Nasdaq and replace with JAVA effective Monday. The software known as Java has become Sun's best known brand since it was its introduction 12 years ago."
Wah! I was going to make some comments, but there is nothing that I can say after reading comments from Jonathan Schwartz's blog on this annoucement (some are quoted below):
Numpty says this is a "TERRIBLE idea" because the usage of "Java" confuses people. J. Dabney commented "As a Sun investor I see this as a horrible idea" because "What does matter is JAVA is more of a limiting factor than this illusion of infinite possibilities". 127.0.0.1 commented this as a "PR stunt" and "It's to impress those stupid financial analysts".
Justin Cook made an even stronger point by saying "Jonathan, this is one more indication the board needs to look for someone with REAL ideas to lead a once great company."
Shouldn't Sun change its company name to JAVA too?
Oh wait again. Ten minutes after publishing the post, I came to some superficially naive guess of how this happened:
Maybe Jonathan have read my earlier post "Cient side Java, Sun and IBM "(June 2006) that says "Sun is the only company who doesn't know how to make money from Java"? So they worked hard and finally came up with this to monetize Java?









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From Application
Virtualization to Xen, a
round-up of the
virtualization themes &
topics being discussed in
NYC June 23-24, 2008 by
the world-class speaker
faculty at the 3rd
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo being held by
SYS-CON Events in The
Roosevelt Hotel, in mi
SOA is mostly associated
with technologies such as
BPEL, SCA and Web
Services. But does SOA
really imply these
technologies? In this
session we will show how
you can use the service
oriented approach while
staying inside the Java
world. jBPM is a powerful
lightweight framework th
This is the story of a
Mac application developer
(okay - it's about two of
them) who set out on a
quest to find an
application development
tool based on Java so his
boss would let him
develop on the Mac
platform, which he loved.
There was only one catch
- he had to find a tool
th
One of the things I
really enjoy at the
moment is the recognition
and adoption of agile
programming as a fully
fledged powerful way to
deliver quality software
projects. As its
figurehead is a group of
very talented individuals
who have created the
agile manifesto
(http://agilema 










