by Sari Kalin

Oracle discloses plan for Java-based personal applications

news
Oct 1, 19962 mins

Plans for network-aware apps are revealed at Sun's recent Java Computing Day

Oracle Corp. is developing a suite of network-based personal productivity applications that are written in Java, an Oracle executive said today.

โ€œWe are actually working on this, a suite of network-aware applications that assume thereโ€™s a dial tone, assume thereโ€™s a server at the other end,โ€ said Joseph Vassallo, vice president of the Sun products division at the Redwood Shores, California company.

The applications being developed by Oracle will be designed to run on network computers, Vassallo said, and will be tightly integrated with other personal productivity applications and with Oracleโ€™s business applications.

Oracle does not have a significant presence in the personal productivity applications market, but Vassallo said that its applications, which will have functionality similar to Microsoft Office, will be advantageous to users because they have been designed from the start to run on a network.

โ€œIt will take Microsoft a long time to get there. Theyโ€™re network-enabling their applications, not making them network-aware,โ€ Vassallo said.

โ€œMost companies are moving fat Windows clients over to fat Java clients. We think thereโ€™s a great opportunity for components.โ€

Vassallo made his remarks at Sun Microsystemโ€™s Java Computing Day in Boston. More information on when the personal productivity applications will be released will be available within 30 to 45 days, he said, adding that information will likely be available at Oracle Open World, a user conference to be held in San Francisco Nov. 3-7. The applications suite will be handled by a separate organization, not by Oracleโ€™s applications, network computing, or Sun products group, according to Vassalo.

Oracle will also release Developer 2000 with Java support to beta testing by the end of the year, Vassalo said.