I picked up Dori Smith's "Java for the World Wide Web" book at the
library the other day; thought I'd at least introduce myself to the
basics of Java programming. I am not a programmer; just did the usual
college class work in the basic languages (Pascal, Fortran, BASIC), and
then a smallish app or two in C. (And of course, WordPerfect's macro
language back "in the day" :-)
However, as I started to download the SDK from Sun's web site, it
started bothering me more and more that Sun's license is such that it
prevents Debian from including it as part of the distro. I'm not sure of
all the issues; I just know that in order to be part of Debian, it must
be "Free Software", and apparently Sun's SDK doesn't fit. As a result, I
decided not to download the SDK, and thus to give up on learning Java. I
know that I'm probably in the minority, placing philosophy above
practicality, but it's just the principle of the thing. I'm not
completely averse to using non-Free software, but I decided I didn't
want to contribute to the use/development of non-free programming languages.
I'm just curious; do other folks (particularly real developers, not just
tinkerer-wanna-be's like myself) have a similar problem with Java, or
have I just been channeling too much RMS lately?
Thanks for any comments.
Kent
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- Re: OT: Politics of Java Kent West
- Re: OT: Politics of Java Craig Dickson
- Re: OT: Politics of Java John Hasler
- Re: OT: Politics of Java Sean 'Shaleh' Perry
- Re: OT: Politics of Java Nori Heikkinen
- Re: OT: Politics of Java Derrick 'dman' Hudson
- Re: OT: Politics of Java Kent West
- Re: OT: Politics of Java Craig Dickson
- Re: OT: Politics of Java Kirk Strauser
- RE: OT: Politics of Java Charlie Reiman
- Re: OT: Politics of Java John Schmidt