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Technology Stocks : All About Sun Microsystems

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To: Fernando Saldanha who wrote (8105)3/8/1998 2:37:00 AM
From: uu  Read Replies (2) of 64865
 
Fernando:

Re: Visual J++

I heard that recently Oracle did a usability test study of Visual J++, Symantec Visual Cafe Pro, Borland's JBuilder (which incidently Oracle is licensing and is calling it AppBuilder), and Sun's Java WorkShop. Of all products tested, Visual J++ scored the highest by about 30% from the second in place (Symantec's VCPRO) followed by JBuilder and then Java Workshop. The purpose of the test was to find ways to improve the User Interface and usability features of AppBuilder (Oracle's version of Borland's JBuilder). The test was supposedly done by random selection of developers.

Having used all products mentioned above plus at least another 10-12 other Java development tools from smaller vendors myself, I have also come to like Microsoft's Visual Studio environment better than everyone else's (I have used Visual C++, as well as Visual J++). Despite the fact that Visual J++ is an "absolute useless" product at this time (as far as most - if not all - Java developers are concerned due to its lack of support for the industry accepted Java standards - i.e. JDK 1.1), it does have a very unique development environment and user interface that comes very natural to the users and very easy to learn and work with. This is partially due to the fact that most Java Developers (if not all) have been working with C++ and most have come to use no other C++ development tool but Microsoft's Visual C++ product.

Therefore, in my humble opinion, it is logical to deduce that "when" Microsoft makes Visual J++ work with Sun's JDK 1.1 and turns it into actually a product that can be used (!), most developers will use that product. I know I will and so would my group and fellow colleagues of 300+ developers.

As always of course just my opinion.

Regards,

Addi Jamshidi
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