Will Oracle Surrender NetBeans to Apache? (infoworld.com) 69
An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes InfoWorld:
Venerable open source Java IDE NetBeans would move from Oracle's jurisdiction to the Apache Software Foundation under a proposal... endorsed by Java founder James Gosling, a longtime fan of the IDE. Moving NetBeans to a neutral venue like Apache, with its strong governance model, would help the project attract more contributions from various organizations, according to the proposal posted in the Apache wiki.
"Large companies are using NetBeans as an application framework to build internal or commercial applications and are much more likely to contribute to it once it moves to neutral Apache ground," the proposal says. While Oracle will relinquish its control over NetBeans under the proposal, individual contributors from Oracle are expected to continue contributing to the project.
On Facebook, Gosling posted the proposal meant "folks like me can more easily contribute to our favorite IDE. The finest IDE in existence will be getting even better, faster!" InfoWorld reports that when aked if Oracle had neglected NetBeans, Gosling said, "Oracle didn't single out NetBeans for neglect, they neglect everything... I'm thrilled that the NetBeans community will now be able to chart its own course."
"Large companies are using NetBeans as an application framework to build internal or commercial applications and are much more likely to contribute to it once it moves to neutral Apache ground," the proposal says. While Oracle will relinquish its control over NetBeans under the proposal, individual contributors from Oracle are expected to continue contributing to the project.
On Facebook, Gosling posted the proposal meant "folks like me can more easily contribute to our favorite IDE. The finest IDE in existence will be getting even better, faster!" InfoWorld reports that when aked if Oracle had neglected NetBeans, Gosling said, "Oracle didn't single out NetBeans for neglect, they neglect everything... I'm thrilled that the NetBeans community will now be able to chart its own course."
This seems more like a 'hostile takeover' (Score:3)
For one, this is a proposal to the Apache foundation to take it onto. There is no indication that Oracle has any say in it.
For second "CDDL + GPL v2 with Classpath Exception. Upon entering Apache, the NetBeans license will be migrated to the current Apache License." Not sure how it is possible to 'migrate' GPLv2 code to Apache since the license is incompatible.
Re: This seems more like a 'hostile takeover' (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sure all commits to Sun and Oracle required copyright assignments, so it's trivial for Oracle to relicense.
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For one, this is a proposal to the Apache foundation to take it onto. There is no indication that Oracle has any say in it.
That is a naive statement.
Oracle owns Sun's intellectual property, which includes Java and Netbeans. Netbeans was under some form of Sun license (GPLish?) before Sun was bought out by Oracle. For the Apache foundation to adopt Netbeans, Netbeans code would have to be forked out of Oracle's repository.
"Hostile takeover" is an invalid term when referred to forking. The question is whether Oracle will challenge the fork. Even if Oracle could lose in court over whether Netbeans "could" fork, it takes money
NetBeans 6.8 (Score:2)
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Already approved (Score:3)
Will Oracle Surrender NetBeans to Apache?
Why is this posed as a question? The articles say Oracle has already turned it over to Apache.
Also, when I see stuff like this:
The finest IDE in existence
My attention immediately shuts off any I have no respect for what that person is saying. Sounds like marketing drivel.
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The finest IDE in existence
My attention immediately shuts off any I have no respect for what that person is saying. Sounds like marketing drivel.
So you have no respect for James Gosling - the creator of Java?
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And clearly since Java has become the bedrock of enterprise development they clearly got something right.
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>And clearly since Java has become the bedrock of enterprise development they clearly got something right.
So... you're saying that Java is our generation's COBALT?
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It's also pretty good for PHP, js and python. Plus anything that uses yaml like Ansible. I've tried other IDE and always get back to Netbeans.
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My attention immediately shuts off any I have no respect for what that person is saying. Sounds like marketing drivel.
They are expressing an opinion, no different from saying "Linux/OSX/Windows is the best thing ever!" - nothing wrong with being excited about your favourite tool, I think, even if others have a different perspective on things.
Here's my experiences with the beast: I have, since the early days of Linux (kernel 0.9 installed wirh a huge pile of floppies) been a terminal+vi+make kind of guy; I never really liked GUI based IDEs and was not too keen on the fullscreen IDEs of the DOS era either. As everybody else
Hoping it's a better success than OpenOffice.org (Score:3)
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Probably not... (Score:2)
Excellent - NetBeans is vastly superior to Eclipse (Score:1)
Caveat: For me anyway :)
Every time I'm forced to use Eclipse (lot of embedded dev environments require it) I end up wanting to poke my eyes out with a stick.
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Ok, I'll give IntelliJ a go. Does get a lot of good reviews and there's a free edition now I believe.
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try IntelliJ if you have to, but don't uninstall Netbeans. You will get back to it, especially if you're like me and you're used to work with multiple projects.
I have to use IntelliJ-ish for Android apps and I hate every minute of it.
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Me: Save the file
Eclipse: I don't wanna
Me: Save the bloody file
Eclipse: No, and now I'm not going to talk to you
Me: Go to timeout (pkill -9 java)
Me: Ready to save the file?
Eclipse: Save the file? Why didn't you say so earlier? I love saving files!
(fa
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CVS, Subversion, Mercurial and ClearCase are supported out of the box, with Git requiring an addon but there is WIP to include it with the IDE itself.
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It's probably easier to rewrite an app than port its source code from SourceSafe to Svn or Git.
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Re:Fuck Java (Score:4, Insightful)
Just FYI, despite what it says in the summary, NetBeans is an IDE with lots of plugins and language support, and works just fine for C++ development as well as Java. I'm using it for the Linux port of my game, written entirely in C++.
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Sorry bro, the big boy web and big data all run on Java.
Spoken like a true wannabe.
Facebook -> PHP
Twitter -> ruby
Youtube -> python, C++
google -> c++, java, go, name it
Wikipedia -> PHP
Walmart -> node js
amazon -> perl, java
imdb -> perl
bing -> c#
The "big boy web" is a lot more diverse and random than you think. As for big data, spark is scala and most data scientist work with R and Python. So take that smugness somewhere else, here you just look dumb.
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I find it amusing when java apologists talk about various other programming languages running on a jvm, as if it was anything else than a clear sign that java isn't all that optimal as a programming language. Why do you think exactly scala exists? (hint: read the wikipedia entry about scala).
It's like when people run Linux on Azure. It's not that much of an endorsement of Microsoft.
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No Slashdot?
Still Perl isn't it?
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Too bad upgrading hasn't made them any more profitable
Apache is where projects go to die (Score:1)
Netbeans is still doing surprisingly well, and is one of the few projects *not* neglected by Oracle. I've yet to see a single project magically take off when migrating to Apache.
not neglected? (Score:2)
I can't even register a new account on netbeans website to report bugs. Even the "contact the webmaster" link is broken.
surrender... (Score:2)
Long-time Netbeans user here (Score:2)
I've used Forte for Java, and then Netbeans. On-premise contracts with various customer sometimes require Eclipse, using which feels like a herd of rodents nibbling at my brain. To me (caveat: this is an opinion based upon 17+ years of experience, not a fact) Netbeans is, indeed, superior to any other IDE in existence, except for emacs if used properly.
What I admire in Netbeans is the ergonomic look-and-feel. It always seems as if the tool or feature you're looking for is right at hand, or at the most 2 mo
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Will Oracle surrender to Apache? (Score:2)
Or will they circle the wagons?