Upload
sogrady
View
6.808
Download
7
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
The Java ecosystem, long a bastion of stability in an otherwise volatile industry, has been unusually challenged of late.Roiled by Oracle's litigation of Google, churned with the news that IBM decommited from Harmony in favor of OpenJDK and lately has been under attack from analysts. It many respects, the unrest couldn't have come at a worse time, as developer attention and focus is fragmenting under a constant stream of platform, language and framework fragmentation. What does this mean for free software developers?We'll explore and unpack the recent events, and evaluate likely scenarios moving forward with an eye towards the implications of Java on the free software community, including the future of Java the language and Java the platform. This will include relevant metrics vis-a-vis developer attention and strategy, as well as an examination of projects important to the ecosystem.http://fosdem.org/2011/schedule/event/riseandfall
Citation preview
10.20.2005
The Rise and Fall and Rise of Java
February 2010
2
http://redmonk.com/public/fosdem.pdf
3
The Rise
4
The History
Soure: Tiobe Programming Community Index
5
The Fall
6
The Decline
7
The Analysts
8
Forrester's Mike Gualtieri
9
Forrester's John Rymer
10
The Events
11
vs
12
What developers were asking us in 2010
Soure: RedMonk Analytics
13
vs
14
Language Fragmentation
15
The Rise
16
+
17
18
19
20
21
Java Mentions on Open Source List Traffic
Soure: MarkMail
22
23
24
25
Has Java Peaked?
26
Yes
27
But everything is relative
28
The evidence simply does not support the claim that Java is a
“dead end”
29
Java is no longer as popular
30
What Java is is themost popular
31
QUESTIONS