Java

From OLPC
Revision as of 11:28, 18 November 2007 by IanOsgood (talk | contribs) (See also)
Jump to: navigation, search

Overview

Java is currently not shipped by default. Only open source software is, and apparently open source versions are not yet usable.[1]

While not shipped by default, people do install java. And governments may install it, along with other non-free software, in their versions of the distribution. It appears applets now work in the browser if java is installed.[2]

In preparing java for wider use, two challenges might be getting something appropriately sized for the olpc laptop (eg, efforts to make the jre less bloated, or using something like JavaSE), and integrating with the Gtk/C/Python infrastructure for collaboration, storage, etc.

But the basic bottleneck, on this as in most things OLPC, is shortage of people. The core team is focused on the core, and on each deadline. The community fills in the many opportunties that leaves. And it doesn't look like anyone is really pushing on Java yet.

But sometimes work is happening without the wiki being updated. So it might be worth writing the devel list, to create a less random guess at current state.

Perhaps what will happen is someone with some applets or a java program they care about will clean up the wiki instructions for installing java. Some country will decide to ship java, and people will create content bundles containing html and applets. Perhaps someone will ship a program compiled with gcj, and the libraries included in their own ~20MB space budget. Someone will bang on using jython for the sugar ui. And java will increasingly become an option.

Installing Java

Potentially interesting Java programs

Java becoming open source

Do the following pages about Java becoming free and open source have implications for using Java on the OLPC laptop?

http://www.sun.com/software/opensource/java/

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6144748.stm

Initially, Java is not available on the laptop. JavaScript—technologically-wise unrelated to it—will be.

Alternatives to Java on the laptop

See "Thin client" for the implications of a server based approach.

Dynamic Scripting

Learn more about "Jython" to create dynamic scripting environments under Java.

See also