| robilad ( @ 2009-04-07 14:33:00 |
OpenJDK Pod Fodder Roundup
Audio:
Danny Coward interviewed John Rose on JSR 292, dynamic languages on the JVM and all that fun stuff happening inside OpenJDK in the DaVinci VM Project.
If you want to go chat with the DaVinci VM developers yourself, they have a mailing list, and since a few days, an IRC channel.
Danny went on to do a second interview, this time around with the man who started it all, James Gosling.
Joe Darcy spent some time in front of a microphone, as well, as part of his trip to the JavaPosse roundup, and being interviewed on Project Coin.
Video:
A few months ago, I spent some time in front of a camera giving a talk at Devoxx, and the result is now up on Parleys.com.
I'd love to see more work happening on turning the wealth of OSGi and Maven repositories into native packages, as that would make packaging large projects like Glassfish or JBoss easier, so I used the opportunity a few weeks ago, and caught up with Andrew Overholt at EclipseCon. We spent some time chatting about efficiently creating packages from OSGi bundles, and directions in which the Eclipse Linux Tools project is heading - definitely a cool project to watch.
Audio:
Danny Coward interviewed John Rose on JSR 292, dynamic languages on the JVM and all that fun stuff happening inside OpenJDK in the DaVinci VM Project.
If you want to go chat with the DaVinci VM developers yourself, they have a mailing list, and since a few days, an IRC channel.
Danny went on to do a second interview, this time around with the man who started it all, James Gosling.
Joe Darcy spent some time in front of a microphone, as well, as part of his trip to the JavaPosse roundup, and being interviewed on Project Coin.
Video:
A few months ago, I spent some time in front of a camera giving a talk at Devoxx, and the result is now up on Parleys.com.
I'd love to see more work happening on turning the wealth of OSGi and Maven repositories into native packages, as that would make packaging large projects like Glassfish or JBoss easier, so I used the opportunity a few weeks ago, and caught up with Andrew Overholt at EclipseCon. We spent some time chatting about efficiently creating packages from OSGi bundles, and directions in which the Eclipse Linux Tools project is heading - definitely a cool project to watch.