I'm somewhat annoyed with the high-handed approach the Ubuntu team applied to this issue, myself. It has certainly wasted a lot of people's time, mine included, for what I view as a very petty bit of political dogmatism. (I have no issue if they want to encourage the use of OpenJDK by increasing awareness, making it the default, or otherwise making it easy. But making it hard to get the Sun SDK is sabotage IMO).
But regardless -- this is not an Ubuntu list, and most people here don't use Ubuntu, or if they do, they don't use it for Android development. So - for future reference -- you'd be a lot better off asking Ubuntu questions on an Ubuntu list or forum. Or even better, googling up the answer yourself. Most of the time, that'll be more efficient than asking, because most of the time, you'll have a question or problem that someone has already run into, and you'll have your pick of answers and explanations to choose from! On Jan 10, 2:58 pm, Marcin Orlowski <webnet.andr...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 10 January 2011 21:19, peeyush varshney <varshney.peey...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > i am using ubunu 10.04. It does not have jdk 5 related package. > > And Google is broken > too?http://www.clickonf5.org/linux/how-install-sun-java-ubuntu-1004-lts/7777 > > > download the binary from oracle link n try to install. > > You should not as in most cases popular software is packaged. May however > be simply not in generic repository but that usually requires one action to > add or enable it in /etc/apt/sources.list -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Android Developers" group. To post to this group, send email to android-developers@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to android-developers+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/android-developers?hl=en