Java is non-free.  It should be avoided like the plague, or alternatives
like gcj (GNU java complier), kaffe, and the like should be used.  All
of these have very limited awt/swing support, however.  GCJ does allow
compiling to native code, which is important if you ever want a java
application to be less than painfully slow (anyone tried using Limewire
lately?).

Until it matures, let's just leave java in the server-applet realm where
it seems to belong.  Just my $.02.

Ryan

On Mon, 2003-04-28 at 09:01, Matt Thoren wrote:
> Java swing is NOT a terrible UI.   It  is easy to use and deploy.   I
> wrote an app one-time and deployed it on Compaq Tru64, OpenVMS,
> NT/2000, Solaris and on Linux without modification.
> 
> The JTable class alone is enough of a reason to use swing.   It is
> very easy to create a front end to a database with JDBC.
> 
> Finding people to maintain and support a deployed app is easy as most
> college level courses include java.
> 
> Java is easy to use, lots of documentation and examples, easy to
> deploy, easy to maintain.   That is why it is popular.    This is why
> I suggest to my clients -- and many of my clients have this in place
> already -- that all new code be written in Java and any migration
> should be done to Java.
> 
> Matt Thoren
> mthoren at mttcc.com

-- 
Ryan Hayle <hackel at walkingfish.com>

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