exactly my point. This involves you gettign an expensive heavily enginered power converter built by a certified company, installed by a certified electrician and then approved by the power companies inspector. Now…
More like allowing everybody to build their own electrical generator and connect it to the grid.
Mixed feelings about this. Opensource good M'kay But what if somebody gets a number in the wrong place and their call drops every other call in the cell? So makers have to suddenly start hardening their cell controllers…
Doesn't help - the patents aren't for Java as such, they were on the basic concept of a JVM. The same thing could apply to any other JVM or even C# and dotNet But Oracle doesn't want a patent war with IBM and Microsoft…
exactly my point. This involves you gettign an expensive heavily enginered power converter built by a certified company, installed by a certified electrician and then approved by the power companies inspector. Now…
More like allowing everybody to build their own electrical generator and connect it to the grid.
Mixed feelings about this. Opensource good M'kay But what if somebody gets a number in the wrong place and their call drops every other call in the cell? So makers have to suddenly start hardening their cell controllers…
Doesn't help - the patents aren't for Java as such, they were on the basic concept of a JVM. The same thing could apply to any other JVM or even C# and dotNet But Oracle doesn't want a patent war with IBM and Microsoft…