by Niall Mckay

Squabble over Java name brewing from Sun, Microsoft

news
Oct 1, 19972 mins
Core JavaInternet ExplorerJava ME

Core problem is Redmond, WA-based company's support for AFCs over JFCs

San Mateo (09/30/97) โ€” The war between Sun Microsystems Inc. and Microsoft Corp. may escalate today as Microsoft launches its Internet Explorer (IE) 4.0 Web browser software.

Sun Microsystems currently is evaluating IE 4.0 and may ask Microsoft to remove the name Java from its software if itโ€™s not happy with compliance, according to industry insiders.

โ€œBasically, we have been running tests on IE 4.0, and we will make a statement when the product is launched tomorrow,โ€ said a spokeswoman for Sun.

At issue is Microsoftโ€™s support for its own Application Foundation Classes (AFCs) instead of Sunโ€™s Java Foundation Classes (JFCs).

However, Microsoft officials believe that any allegations about incompatibility of IE 4.0 is nothing more than a part of Sunโ€™s bid to discredit its software.

โ€œAccording to Sunโ€™s own compliance testing kit, IE 4.0 is the most Java-compatible browser on the market,โ€ said Cornelius Willis, Microsoftโ€™s director of platforms marketing. โ€œThis is so ludicrous. Netscapeโ€™s browser isnโ€™t even compatible with the JDK 1.1, so is Sun going to pull the license from them?โ€ he asked.

One user believes that Microsoftโ€™s support for AFC is a veiled attempt to scuttle Java.

โ€œOur view its that we do not really care about the exact functionality of a standard as long as itโ€™s a standard,โ€ said James Phillips, chief technologist with Visual Numerics, in Houston, TX. โ€œWe do not support people who wish to create a variant of Java, destroying the write once run anywhere principal,โ€ Phillips said.