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Ubuntu
has long been associated with many shades of brown, the colors of
humanity which the distribution and its community embraces. But in
today's release of Ubuntu 7.04, a new color will be added to the
palette: the color purple.
That's
the color often associated with Sun Microsystems, which has partnered
with Ubuntu's vendor Canonical to release a complete, free-of-charge
Java stack for Ubuntu users. The stack is made up from Sun's J2EE
offering GlassFish, Java SE (JDK 6), Derby-based Java DB 10.2, and the
NetBeans IDE 5.5.
Ubuntu Gets a New Color: Purple

Ubuntu
has long been associated with many shades of brown, the colors of
humanity which the distribution and its community embraces. But in
today's release of Ubuntu 7.04, a new color will be added to the
palette: the color purple.
That's
the color often associated with Sun Microsystems, which has partnered
with Ubuntu's vendor Canonical to release a complete, free-of-charge
Java stack for Ubuntu users. The stack is made up from Sun's J2EE
offering GlassFish, Java SE (JDK 6), Derby-based Java DB 10.2, and the
NetBeans IDE 5.5.
While
Java components have been around for quite some time, this will be the
first time users will be able to be able to easily download and install
this stack. They're all just an apt-get command away.
Specifically, the stack's packages will be made available in Ubuntu's Multiverse repository in today's release.
This is
not an unexpected release, since industry watchers has long known about
the plan, beginning when Sun and Canonical announced their partnership
in 2006.
"What
we're announcing is a continuation of the Sun-Canonical partnership
which began last Summer, when Java was open sourced, and slightly
before that when the JDK was released under the DLJ--the distribution
license for Java--which allowed it to be placed into Linux
distributions," explained Ian Murdock, Chief Open Source Platforms
Officer at Sun.
Indeed,
as recently as November of 2006, it was publicly known that Java would
be released with Ubuntu as some point. The only question was when. The
partnership seems to gone well enough that the Java stack was ready to
be included in the very next six-month Ubuntu development cycle,
culminating in the today's 7.04 "Feisty Fawn" release.
The
potential for this release is significant, since adding a J2EE
application server to a distro is enough to raise some questions about
a possible face-off with the Red Hat/JBoss combination. But both Sun
and Canonical are emphasizing the developers more, and the enterprise
application deployers less.
"The
current model for Linux installs is to just rummage around and find the
components for the Java stack," said Jeet Kaul, Sun's VP of Developer
Products and Programs. "What you are going to get now is a fully
integrated, optimized for Ubuntu, Java stack in a single location."
While
Kaul emphasized the developers' benefits, he also recognized the other
components of the stack had some positive uses. "This stack, which
includes GlassFish is enterprise-ready and high performance. While our
focus is on developers, they can start with working to build
applications and be ready to deploy them."
"I can't
think of another environment where it will be as easy, simply, to pull
down all the tools that you would need to develop," added Chris Kenyon,
Business Development Director with Canonical. "Another huge benefit is
that as new stuff gets done in the GlassFish community and NetBeans,
it's instantly available."
With the
availability of the tools in this stack, it's a natural assumption to
wonder if this is the beginning of Ubuntu being positioned up against
other enterprise servers that have their own application stacks, such
as Red Hat and JBoss. When the question was brought up, this
possibility was recognized as a possible user choice, but being in the
middleware space wasn't something Canonical or Sun embraced.
"I
certainly think that having this set of products available on Ubuntu is
great for people who want a choice when they're making those
decisions," Kenyon replied. "But when you look at where Ubuntu is
likely to be on the server in the next 12-24 months, we see the
fastest-growing area of deployments of Linux servers still to be around
edge-of the network stuff--file servers, print servers, Web
servers--and that's where Ubuntu as a server product is still very
good."
Read the original article: http://www.linuxplanet.com/linuxplanet/newss/6380/1/
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