Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 31st May 2012 21:41 UTC
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RE[4]: Comment by shmerl
by JAlexoid on Fri 1st Jun 2012 01:16
in reply to "RE[3]: Comment by shmerl"
RE[4]: Comment by shmerl
by TechGeek on Fri 1st Jun 2012 02:56
in reply to "RE[3]: Comment by shmerl"
The fragmentation of Java and issue of incompatible implementation are valid critiques of Android. But what does it have to do with the idea that APIs shouldn't be copyrightable? Both are right.
According to Oracle's own engineers, Android is not derived from Java. Therefore there can be no fragmentation.
Looking at that from usability perspective - isn't it ridiculous that on supposedly Java (as in Dalvik) based Android you can't run Java (as in JVM) programs? Compatibility is not a bad thing. There were probably technical reasons why Google went with Dalvik (supposedly performance advantage). But in practice it did cause a rift.
Edited 2012-06-01 03:08 UTC





Member since:
2010-06-08
The fragmentation of Java and issue of incompatible implementation are valid critiques of Android. But what does it have to do with the idea that APIs shouldn't be copyrightable? Both are right.