A weekly talk show taking a pragmatic look at the art and business of Software Development and the world of technology.
383: Java Justice
October 13, 2020
1:02:54
45.29 MB
Downloads: 0
We have a different take on the Oracle v. Google case that may usher in an API copyright doom! Or so they say...
Plus we answer great feedback and chew on the future of Windows 10.
Sponsored By:
- Linode: Receive a $100 60-day credit towards your new account. Promo Code: linode.com/coder
- A Cloud Guru: Learn about some intermediate to advanced Python topics and see how to apply concepts you’ve already learned to solve different problems.
Links:
- Computer Scientists Break Traveling Salesperson Record — After 44 years, there’s finally a better way to find approximate solutions to the notoriously difficult traveling salesperson problem.
- The unreasonable effectiveness of the Julia programming language
- No, Microsoft is not rebasing Windows to Linux — The choice will not really be Windows or Linux, it will be whether you boot Hyper-V or KVM first, and Windows and Ubuntu stacks will be tuned to run well on the other.
- Sun Microsystems - Wikipedia
- Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc. - Wikipedia
- Google’s Supreme Court faceoff with Oracle was a disaster for Google — Supreme Court justices seem poised to allow copyrights on APIs.
- Android chief Andy Rubin said java.lang APIs are copyrighted in 2006 email — In 2006 email thread, Rubin said that Sun owned the intellectual property and brand for Java and that the Java.lang APIs were copyrighted. Over the next several years his thinking changed.
- Oracle vs Google - Android chief Rubin quizzed over Java emails
- Former Sun CEO says Google's Android didn't need license for Java APIs — Jonathan Schwartz testifies that Java APIs were not considered proprietary or protected by Sun, as long as Google didn't use the Java name
- The Mike Dominick Show Episode 39: Martin Wimpress of Canonical