Microsoft and Justice Department grapple over Java question

By Patrick Thibodeau
IDG News Service, Washington Bureau


Posted at 9:58 AM PT, Dec 3, 1998
WASHINGTON -- James Gosling, creator of the Java cross-platform programming
language, acknowledged in court Thursday during the Microsoft antitrust
trial that there were problems with Sun Microsystems' claim that Java is a
"write once, run anywhere" developer's tool.

Microsoft attorney Tom Burt spent the morning attacking Sun's marketing
claim. And in a sense Gosling faced a trial by news media, as Burt
introduced a series of articles and test studies by computer publications
that were critical of Sun's claims for Java.

The U.S. Department of Justice is trying to show that Microsoft's attempt
to distribute a version of Java incompatible with Sun's own arose out of
its fear that Java's growing popularity would weaken Microsoft's monopoly
on the operating system market. Sun is currently pursuing a lawsuit against
Microsoft charging that it violated the terms of its Java licensing
agreement by distributing incompatible implementations of Java.

The issue goes to the heart of Sun's allegations that Microsoft's version
of Java threatened to make the most widely distributed version of Java
technologies incompatible with the standard Java language developed by Sun
-- thus undermining Sun's efforts to allow Java-based applications to run
on a wide variety of operating systems.

Gosling disputed some of the testing results, and David Boies, the lead
trial counsel for the government, questioned the reliability of some of the
tests, saying they weren't done by scientific review.

Burt, however, said that the articles were extremely relevant because
Microsoft and Sun were in a "competition for the hearts and minds of
developers."

Gosling said repeatedly on the stand that there were problems with the
initial versions of the Java Developers Kit (JDK). "This issue of
compatibility is a function of time ... it is getting better," he said.

Gosling also took issue with some of the test data presented by different
articles. In response to one article that tested the compatibility of
different Java applets, he said, "I think that's completely false. I don't
where they got their test data, I don't know how they performed the test."

Microsoft is claiming that Sun has greatly overstated Java's capabilities
and that the programming language can only achieve portability unless there
are significant tradeoffs in performance and functionality. Microsoft has
been arguing that its specific implementation is better and preferred by
developers.

And to show the claims by Sun are not unique, and that previous efforts to
develop cross-platform languages have failed, Burt turned the clock back to
1978 and cited a textbook on the C programming language in which the
authors had claimed that C was a portable language. Many of the claims made
in the book are similar to what Sun has said about Java.

But Gosling said the situation is considerably more complicated. He said C
was "an incredibly powerful example of how standards get twisted."

As C language compilers were implemented for different operating systems
dramatic variations between them emerged. Gosling said he conceived of Java
in part "from the scars that I acquired in doing C porting."

"One of my goals in building Java was not to live through that
fragmentation again," he said.

Gosling said that Sun was "working very hard" to improve Java's
cross-platform capability. "One of the main reasons why we started our
lawsuit in San Jose was to make sure that this problem got better, not worse."

Two weeks ago, Sun was granted a preliminary injunction by a U.S. district
court in its Java technology lawsuit against Microsoft. Judge Ronald Whyte
of the U.S. District Court in San Jose, Northern District of California,
ruled that Sun is likely to prevail in the case, and ordered Microsoft to
make changes to its products so that they include an implementation of Java
that will pass Sun's Java compatibility test suite.

Microsoft Corp., in Redmond, Wash., is at www.microsoft.com. The U.S.
Department of Justice, in Washington, can be reached at www.usdoj.gov.

Patrick Thibodeau is a senior writer at Computerworld.


From MAILER-DAEMON@cs.depaul.edu Thu Dec 3 13:16:47 1998